Speaking at a press conference with the foreign ministers of Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Iceland, Salome Zurabishvili said the governing Georgian Dream party had diverted the country down a "very serious" road.
After 30 days of protests by hundreds of thousands of people on the streets of the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, MPs voted on Tuesday by 84 to 30 to back the adoption of a "foreign influence" law.
Under the legislation, media or civil society groups in Georgia that receive more than 20% of their funding from abroad will have to register as "organisations serving the interests of a foreign power".
The US assistant secretary of state Jim O'Brien on Tuesday called the vote a potential turning point, with the legislation a possible tool to repress dissenting voices. He had warned Georgia's prime minister, Irakli Kobakhidze, that his government would lose hundreds of millions in military and economic aid if it became an "adversary and not a partner".
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