By Elliot Gulliver-Needham Georgia Capital, a UK-listed investment trust that owns around five per cent of Georgia’s economy, has charted its road to recovery after crashing during the country’s protests. In May, protests began against the Georgian parliament in Tbilisi due its new foreign agents law, which will see NGOs and independent media receiving 20 per cent of their funding from abroad required to register as an “agent of foreign influence” with the Georgian Justice Ministry. Human Rights Watch described the standards as “onerous reporting requirements and inspections”, with other group…