Sozar Subari, the former Minister of Refugees in Georgia, has criticized organizations like USAID and NED, which are funded by the US state budget.

Report informs that, according to Subari, these organizations provide grants to Georgian youth to teach them how to stage coups and use weapons.

“For example, USAID spent half a million dollars to finance atheism and anti-religious campaigns in Nepal,” Subari noted. “The question arises, why should the US government finance the promotion of atheism in Nepal? What is its purpose? However, we see that the same policy has been implemented in Georgia for many years at the expense of American grants.”

Despite this criticism, the former minister spoke positively about the newly elected US President Donald Trump and his upcoming administration. “Trump was elected by the American people, he is the President of the United States and has never said ‘Georgia First’, his slogan is ‘America First’. Trump does everything for America,” Subari emphasized.

He added that when Georgia passed the “Law on Family Values and Protection of Minors”, they were seriously told that if they did not repeal this law, the door to the European Union would be closed forever. “Moreover, they even began to threaten us with sanctions. At that time, Trump won the presidential election and it turned out that he and his team fully share the spirit of this law,” Subari said.

The former minister also mentioned that when he said the performance at the opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics was practically an insult to Christianity, the entire liberal world laughed at Georgia. “At the same time, the future US Secretary of State Marco Rubio also said that this was a shameful performance – that is, our views coincide here as well,” Subari noted.