Tens of thousands of Georgians joined a protest rally Saturday in the ex-Soviet republic's capital Tbilisi to demand the government's resignation, claimed it has mishandled the battered economy. Protesters packed Tbilisi's central Freedom Square after being called onto the streets by exiled former president Mikheil Saakashvili's United National Movement (UNM), before marching towards the State Chancellery building, the seat of government. They carried Georgian flags and placards demanding the government step down.
Saakashvili addressed the rally by video link from Brussels as the cheering crowd chanted his name. "We are united by our shared task to liberate Georgia from the government which destroys our country," Saakashvili said in an emotional address. "We will get Georgia back on a right track. We will win," he added. Saakashvili's UNM party has accused the ruling Georgian Dream coalition government of mishandling the tiny Caucasus country's economy that, during the last two years, saw growth slowdown, a 30-percent currency devaluation, and rising inflation and unem ployment.