Day: April 25, 2024
Lazare Grgoriadis, 22, was released from prison on April 24 after President Salome Zurabishvili signed a pardon decree. Grigoriadis was sentenced to nine years imprisonment on charges of throwing a Molotov cocktail at riot police and setting the police car on fire during the March protests last year. Later in the evening, Lazare joined young protestors on Rustaveli Avenue.
Despite police warnings not to block streets, for the tenth day in a row, young people gathered in front of the Parliament building, blocking Rustaveli Avenue, marching through central streets, and chanting all the time— “We are heading to Europe! No to Russian Law!” The Georgian Gen-Z have persisted in rallying daily, even swearing a solemn oath to defend the country’s European choice.
Archbishop Zenon Iarajuli of Dmanisi and Agarak-Tashiri issued a statement on the reintroduced Foreign Agents Bill, emphasizing that if the bill is passed, the non-commercial organizations of the Georgian Church will also be considered foreign agents and adding that the legislation threatens to stigmatize individuals and organizations, which is not only a violation of the Constitution but also of Christian values.
Yesterday’s hot debate at the European Parliament session has fueled the flurry of commentary from Georgian politicians. As five draft resolutions are tabled in Strasbourg for the vote scheduled for April 25, the ruling Georgian Dream party tries to brush aside the criticism and attacks MEPs, while the opposition hopes that mentioning sanctions will incite authorities to come to their senses and change the course. Here, Civil.ge has collected the reactions of Georgian politicians to the debate in the European Parliament.
Senior lawmakers of the ruling Georgian Dream party, including Speaker Shalva Papuashvili and ruling majority leader Mamuka Mdinaradze, continue a series of regional meetings to promote anti-LGBT legislation and in order to defend “traditional family values.” “While on board, some airliners announce – Dear passengers… – and this is not at all accidental,” said Anri Okahanshvili, Chair of the parliamentary legal affairs committee at one of those anti-LGBT gatherings.
The government issued a decree extending visa-free stays for Ukrainian citizens from two to three years. The decree would also be applied retroactively to those who entered Georgia earlier. The government administration clarified to Civil.ge that the extension is intended to enable Ukrainian citizens who have fled the war and are nearing the end of their two-year residency in Georgia to remain in the country legally.
Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze advertised the prospect of Tbilisi’s new international airport at the government session on April 8, appearing to be the government’s pet project of the election season. But Georgia’s military and security analysts say the controversial project would undermine Tbilisi’s defenses, deplete the army’s combat readiness, and effectively end one of the key NATO-Georgia projects.
Persons with disabilities and CSOs issued a joint statement condemning the Georgian Government’s non-inclusive and “shady” nomination of a candidate for the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD Committee). The signatories accuse the country of violating the relevant Convention by excluding the procedures for due participation. The undersigned urge an international response.
The statement urges the international community “to condemn the absence of transparency and civic participation” in the nomination and also calls on “the intergovernmental and international non-governmental organizations, as well as the individual nations, to further inquire into the situation, publish and disseminate the findings.” The Georgian community and CSOs expect support from their international counterparts and express readiness to provide more information.
The statement highlights that significant efforts and foreign funding have been dedicated to establishing participation mechanisms for persons with disabilities. However, this “direct violation” still occurred due to the “façade” nature of the government’s participation mechanisms.
In this context, the statement also refers to the reintroduced Foreign Agents bill. “The authorities justify the introduction of this bill by the need for civil society to be transparent. While the government itself does not adhere to the principles of transparency, accountability, and inclusive participation, the authorities lacked the political will to involve persons with disabilities in decision-making on such a matter of nationwide importance.”
This statement is joined by the following representative organizations of persons with disabilities and other organizations working on disability rights, parents of disabled children and adults, and disabled activists:
Organizations:
Platform for New Opportunities/PNO
Georgian Network of ex/users and survivors of Psychiatry
Families against discrimination/FAD
Movement Accessible Environment for Everyone
Sentire
Movement Inclusive Society Georgia
Equal Participation Center/EPC
Aures Foundation
Partnership for Human Rights/PHR
Georgian Young Lawyers Association/GYLA
Social Justice Center
Individuals:
Esma Gumberidze
Giorgi Akhmeteli
Giorgi Enukidze
Marine Korkotadze
Ana Sikhashvili
Olga Kalina
Shorena Shavlakadze
David Kviriliani
Ekaterine Tortladze
Tatia Datashvili
Givi Jvarsheishvili
Goderdzi Gogoladze

