A staff member of an organization implementing a rule of law initiative in Georgia said of the aftermath of the U.S. aid cuts: “The entire civil society support disappeared without any backup plan.”
Date: 4/25
Region: Europe & Central Asia
Country: Georgia
Topic: Governance & Rights
Policy Lens: Democracy & Governance
Entry Type: Field Observation
Additional Context: This information was collected by Human Rights Watch, or HRW, in an interview with a staff member of the East-West Management Institute, which implemented the USAID-funded project working to increase citizen oversight and providing legal assistance to those facing judicial action in Georgia.
According to HRW, this USAID project was the main source of legal aid funding in the country, circumventing restrictions on foreign aid that were signed into law in 2024. The termination of the project thus removed access to about $1 million in legal aid to people facing trial following their participation in protests against the suspension of European Union accession talks by the Georgian Government. Civil society organizations had been particularly impacted by this law, which forced organizations receiving foreign funding to accept the label of 'foreign agent,' work from exile, or abandon work altogether.
Source: Human Rights Watch

