2 June: The second local self-governance election held in Georgia. Seven political parties cleared the 4 percent poll barrier to gain Tbilisi Council seats. The Labor Party, led by Shalva Natelashvili, received 26 percent of the vote, to lead all parties, followed by Mikheil Saakashvili’s National Movement, with 24 percent.
4 June: Tevzadze and Lieutenant General Unal Onsipahioglu, who is a senior member of the Turkish Army General Staff, attended the formal reopening of the Vaziani military base near Tbilisi FROM which Russia withdrew in 2002.
16 June: Adjarian State Council Chairman Aslan Abashidze’s 26-year-old son, Giorgi, was elected mayor of Batumi with over 92 percent of the vote.
17 June: Zurab Zhvania’s (Former speaker of Georgian Parliament) Team forms a new party the United Democrats. The leadership of the party was mainly composed with reformers’ wing of the Citizens’ Union of Georgia (CUG) party, which is now fully controlled by the pro-Presidential group.
18 June: A British citizen with the EU in Georgia was abducted in Tbilisi by armed men wearing police and military uniforms. Peter Shaw, 59, was planning to leave Tbilisi in the next few days after working there in various capacities for six years.
20 June: Responding to an appeal by the opposition National Movement party, a Tbilisi district court has instructed the Central Election Commission to recount the ballots cast in the Georgian capital during the 2 June local elections.
29 June: Delegates to a congress of the ruling Citizens’ Union of Georgia party unanimously elected Minister of State Avtandil Jorbenadze as party chairman. They also elected President Eduard Shevardnadze (former Chairman of the party) as honorary chairman, and virtually the entire government to the party’s governing council.
28 June: Military contingents FROM nine NATO members states, including the United States, Turkey, and Canada, as well as FROM six countries that are members of NATO’s Partnership for Peace program ended 10 days of maneuvers at the former Russian military base of Vaziani near Tbilisi. The maneuvers, codenamed “Cooperative Best Effort-2002,” were held under the command of General Oktar Ataman, the Turkish head of NATO’s Joint Command Southeast.