Tbilisi (GBC) - The Georgian Foreign Ministry has summoned the UK Ambassador to Georgia, Gareth Ward, who arrived at the ministry on September 25. Ward did not make any comments to the media before entering the building.

His summons followed that of German Ambassador Peter Fischer, who was called to the ministry a day earlier, on September 24.

According to the Foreign Ministry, Fischer was reminded of the Vienna Convention, with Georgian officials stressing that an ambassador should not interfere in the internal politics of a host state. The ministry also expressed concern about what it described as “attempts to promote a radical agenda.”

Following the meeting, Fischer firmly rejected the accusations. Writing on social media, he stated that the responsibility for the deterioration of German-Georgian relations lies with the Georgian government and ruling party representatives, whom he accused of blocking Georgia’s European integration process.

“I rebuffed the groundless attacks against me in detail, and I blamed the government and representatives of the Georgian Dream for the new low point in German-Georgian relations. Their actions and rhetoric caused this, and they are blocking the path leading to the European Union. They did not want to listen. I am not a radical. Germany remains a friend of Georgia,” he wrote.,” Fischer wrote.

Diplomatic history underscores the significance of these developments. Since the establishment of relations with Germany in April 1992 and with the United Kingdom later that same month, this marks the first time ambassadors from both countries have been formally summoned by the Georgian Foreign Ministry.