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GD Economy Minister Meets British Ambassador Georgian Dream Economy Minister Mariam Kvrivishvili met with UK Ambassador to Georgia Gareth Ward, the Economy Ministry reported on March 27. According to the ministry’s press release, the sides discussed “the dynamics of economic cooperation” between the two countries, Georgia’s plans to “further strengthen its role as a regional transit hub,” the “positive dynamics” of direct flights between Georgia and the UK, as well as Tbilisi’s “mechanisms for enforcing sanctions in the maritime transport sector.” Deputy Economy Ministers, Tamar Ioseliani and Genadi Arveladze, also attended the meeting. The British Embassy has not reported on the meeting. “The sides discussed the dynamics of economic cooperation between the two countries,” the ministry said, adding, “It was noted that over the past two years, the United Kingdom has ranked first in terms of direct foreign investment in Georgia, which reflects British business confidence in the country’s economy and investment environment.” The press release said it was also noted during the meeting that “Georgia plans to further strengthen its role as a regional transit hub,” with Kvrivishvili stating that the country “continues its integration into international transport markets and global supply chains through infrastructure modernization.” The press release added that they also discussed the “positive dynamics” of direct flight connections between the two countries, noting that the start of operations by British Airways and EasyJet has led to “rapid growth” in passenger traffic. “At the meeting, the Georgian side also drew attention to the enforcement mechanisms for sanctions in the maritime transport sector. The minister noted that all procedures at Georgia’s ports fully comply with national and international obligations, which the country implements meticulously,” the press release added. * 10/03/2026 – EU Drops Kulevi Port Sanctions, Citing ‘Commitments’ from Georgia, SOCAR Sanctions and Strained Relations The meeting came amid deteriorated relations between Tbilisi and London. On February 24, the UK sanctioned Georgia’s two major pro-government TV channels, Imedi TV and POSTV, for “Russian disinformation,” saying they spread “deliberately misleading information” about Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in a way that undermines Ukraine’s sovereignty. Georgian Dream slammed the move as “unserious,” “shameful” and “tragic,” with the Foreign Ministry summoning Ambassador Ward to question the basis of the sanctions, and the GD political council further stating that it was an “unprecedented example of an open attack on free media.” The ruling party expressed support for the sanctioned channels as uncertainty persists over what specific effects the sanctions may have on the broadcasters. In a report titled “Disinformation diplomacy: How malign actors are seeking to undermine democracy,” published on March 27, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons called for further sanctions on Georgian Dream officials and media. The report reviews the political situation in Georgia, concluding by saying that the Committee is “deeply concerned” about the “continued deterioration of democracy in Georgia which, on its current trajectory, will lead to an entrenched autocracy firmly under Russia’s sphere of influence, like Belarus.” Condemning the GD’s decisions in “suspending EU accession talks, repressing opposition voices, limiting legitimate protest, and spreading disinformation,” the Committee said these actions “imitate the Russian playbook and indicate coordination between Tbilisi and Moscow.” It added that it supports the actions already taken by the UK Government “in sanctioning Georgian officials responsible for enabling human rights violations in response to legitimate protests.” The Committee then called for further targeted sanctions. “We call on the Government to implement new targeted financial and travel sanctions on Georgian Dream officials supporting the Foreign Agents Registration Act, Georgian kleptocrats and Georgian media organisation spreading disinformation.” “These additional designations would significantly increase the cost on those who are seeking to undermine the Georgian people’s desire for a European alignment and signify the UK’s support for Georgian democracy, not autocracy,” the Committee said. Also Read: * 19/12/2025 – UK Calls on Georgia to Curb Russian Oil Imports Amid Wider Sanctions * 19/09/2025 – UK Sanctions Ex-Prosecutor Otar Partskhaladze, Ultra-Conservative Figure Levan Vasadze * 10/04/2025 – UK Sanctions Georgia’s Prosecutor General, Three Security Officials for Human Rights Abuses * 19/12/2024 – UK Sanctions Senior Georgian Authorities, Including Minister of Interior

GD Economy Minister Meets British Ambassador #Civil #Georgia

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After Patriarch’s Funeral, Ruling Party Accuses Opponents of ‘Anti-Church Campaign’ Georgian Dream officials have accused opponents and critics of waging an “anti-Church campaign” aimed, among other things, at discrediting senior clergy and the late Patriarch Ilia II, days after the widely-revered leader of the Georgian Orthodox Church was laid to rest in a funeral that drew tens of thousands. In TV appearances following the funeral, party leaders, including GD Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze and Parliament Speaker Shalva Papuashvili, claimed that opposition politicians, non-governmental organizations, and foreign critics had for years sought to undermine Georgia’s Orthodox Church and its late leader, a campaign they say continued even after the Patriarch’s death. “They are generally fighting against authorities,” Kobakhidze said in his first interview since Ilia II’s passing with pro-government Imedi TV. He said the “fake ideology” is being deployed against authorities globally, without specifying a source. He argued the high approval enjoyed by the Orthodox Church and its late leader made them “one of the main targets” of such campaigns locally. He added, however, that these campaigns are doomed to fail in Georgia. “These days have shown us that there is an overwhelming public majority for whom values, principles, traditions, the Church, and the state are dear, and an overwhelming minority that not only distances itself from all of this but engages in what was once called militant atheism during the Bolshevik period,” Kobakhidze told Imedi on March 25. Kobakhidze particularly lashed out at NGOs, saying they “spared no word of condolences” for the late Patriarch, claiming it was because they serve a “dark deed,” a part of which, he suggested, is “the fight against the Church, state institutions, and all kinds of authorities.” He also slammed opposition politicians and foreign critics, accusing them of the same. The GD PM said it would be “politically very advantageous” to offer condolences, but added, “These are agents – foreign and local politicians representing an agent network. How could an NGO, or any politician in the country or abroad, declare condolences to the Georgian people over the patriarch’s death when they know they will have to take part in a campaign against the Church tomorrow?” A number of foreign officials and embassies offered condolences to Georgia following Ilia II’s passing. Kobakhidze also said that “one of the main goals” of the “transparency law,” the GD-dubbed name for the Foreign Agents Law, was to “halt the campaign against the Church.” He added, “It took us so much effort to slow down this campaign. Approximately four to five years ago, this campaign was at its peak intensity, and we had to expose it.” Kobakhidze’s claims were echoed the following night by Shalva Papuashvili during an interview on the same program. Claiming that “there are forces that see their competition in the Church,” Papuashvili extended his accusations to the European Union, saying that “a kind of pseudo-religion is being created […] whose natural competition is the Church…There is an attempt to replace the Church with this pseudo-religious movement.” He added, “We see the Brussels bureaucracy using methods of pseudo-religion to exert ideological influence over different countries and societies, and the Church is a natural competition for them.”  In a March 26 Facebook post sharing the late patriarch’s 2004 interview where Ilia II speaks of the “anti-Church campaign” and globalisation in that regard, Papuashvili claimed, “The patriarch speaks of those foreign forces that do not wish for a strong Church in Georgia.” “And if the Church does not place itself in the service of their globalist agenda, they will try to destroy it – through division, discrediting, insults, and by labeling it anti-Western or pro-Russian,” Papuashvili said. “They give these processes fake names – ‘civil society’ – invent fake ideologies – ‘gender identity’ – and present themselves as unconditional progress, a priori admirable and a savior,” he added. “They are offering a world in which non-governmental organizations elected by no one stand above the people’s will, where fashionable theories take precedence over tradition, and temporary ideologies are placed above faith.” Also Read: * 22/03/2026 – Obituary | Ilia II – The Man Who Reinvented the Church * 21/03/2026 – Kobakhidze Visits Hungary, Meets Orbán, Addresses CPAC

After Patriarch’s Funeral, Ruling Party Accuses Opponents of ‘Anti-Church Campaign’ #Civil #Georgia

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#law #ACLU #civil #rights #immigration

BREAKING: A federal court ruled ICE must provide access to legal counsel for people detained at the Florida detention facility known as "Alligator Alcatraz."

The Trump administration cannot deny people their right to an attorney. --ACLU 40 minutes ago

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McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 1 ⭐ Historical Star-Rated Review ★★★★★ (5/5) – A Firsthand Account of Leadership and Controversy McClellan’s Own Story offers a rare and deeply personal look into the mind of one of the most debated figures of the American Civil War. Written by General George B. McClellan himself, this memoir provides insight into his leadership, strategic decisions, and complex relationship with political authorities. Listeners are taken behind the scenes of major campaigns, gaining a clearer understanding of McClellan’s cautious yet methodical approach to warfare. The audiobook sheds light on his clashes with President Abraham Lincoln, offering his side of the story in a conflict that shaped the nation. For history enthusiasts, this work is invaluable—not just as a military account, but as a human portrait of ambition, pressure, and the burden of command during one of America’s darkest hours.

📣 New Podcast! "McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 1" on @Spreaker #19th #abraham #american #audiobook #b #century #civil #era #general #george #history #leadership #lincoln #mcclellan #memoir #military #own #story #union #war

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McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 2 ⭐ Historical Star-Rated Review ★★★★★ (5/5) – A Firsthand Account of Leadership and Controversy McClellan’s Own Story offers a rare and deeply personal look into the mind of one of the most debated figures of the American Civil War. Written by General George B. McClellan himself, this memoir provides insight into his leadership, strategic decisions, and complex relationship with political authorities. Listeners are taken behind the scenes of major campaigns, gaining a clearer understanding of McClellan’s cautious yet methodical approach to warfare. The audiobook sheds light on his clashes with President Abraham Lincoln, offering his side of the story in a conflict that shaped the nation. For history enthusiasts, this work is invaluable—not just as a military account, but as a human portrait of ambition, pressure, and the burden of command during one of America’s darkest hours.

📣 New Podcast! "McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 2" on @Spreaker #19th #abraham #american #audiobook #b #century #civil #era #general #george #history #leadership #lincoln #mcclellan #memoir #military #own #story #union #war

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McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 3 ⭐ Historical Star-Rated Review ★★★★★ (5/5) – A Firsthand Account of Leadership and Controversy McClellan’s Own Story offers a rare and deeply personal look into the mind of one of the most debated figures of the American Civil War. Written by General George B. McClellan himself, this memoir provides insight into his leadership, strategic decisions, and complex relationship with political authorities. Listeners are taken behind the scenes of major campaigns, gaining a clearer understanding of McClellan’s cautious yet methodical approach to warfare. The audiobook sheds light on his clashes with President Abraham Lincoln, offering his side of the story in a conflict that shaped the nation. For history enthusiasts, this work is invaluable—not just as a military account, but as a human portrait of ambition, pressure, and the burden of command during one of America’s darkest hours.

📣 New Podcast! "McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 3" on @Spreaker #19th #abraham #american #audiobook #b #century #civil #era #general #george #history #leadership #lincoln #mcclellan #memoir #military #own #story #union #war

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McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 4 ⭐ Historical Star-Rated Review ★★★★★ (5/5) – A Firsthand Account of Leadership and Controversy McClellan’s Own Story offers a rare and deeply personal look into the mind of one of the most debated figures of the American Civil War. Written by General George B. McClellan himself, this memoir provides insight into his leadership, strategic decisions, and complex relationship with political authorities. Listeners are taken behind the scenes of major campaigns, gaining a clearer understanding of McClellan’s cautious yet methodical approach to warfare. The audiobook sheds light on his clashes with President Abraham Lincoln, offering his side of the story in a conflict that shaped the nation. For history enthusiasts, this work is invaluable—not just as a military account, but as a human portrait of ambition, pressure, and the burden of command during one of America’s darkest hours.

📣 New Podcast! "McClellan’s Own Story by George B. McClellan | Civil War Audiobook Memoir of a Union General Part 4" on @Spreaker #19th #abraham #american #audiobook #b #century #civil #era #general #george #history #leadership #lincoln #mcclellan #memoir #military #own #story #union #war

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Georgia Records Lowest Number of Births in Over Three Decades Georgia had 37,867 live births in 2025, the lowest figure since 1994, the earliest year for which official data is publicly available. According to figures published by the National Statistics Office of Georgia on March 27, the number of live births declined by 4.1% from 2024. A total of 19,856 boys and 18,011 girls were born. Deaths rose 0.8% to 44,319, leaving the country with 6,452 more deaths than births in 2025. The population decline persisted across all regions except Tbilisi, Adjara, and Kvemo Kartli. The most births were recorded in Tbilisi (14,334), Adjara (4,551), and Guria (807). The fewest were in Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti (191). Tbilisi also had the highest number of deaths (12,743), while Racha-Lechkhumi and Kvemo Svaneti had the fewest (585). Geostat data shows a modest increase in first-order births, rising to 36.6% from 35.9% in 2024. Second children accounted for 32.9%, while third and subsequent births remained largely unchanged at 29.1%. Births among women aged 25-39 increased to 70.4% from 69.5%, while births among women under 25 declined to 21.9% from 23.2%. Births among women aged 40 and older rose slightly to 7.7%. The mean age of mothers at first birth was 27.4 years. Infant mortality stood at 7.6 per 1,000 live births, while the under-five mortality rate reached 9.1 per 1,000. A total of 22,285 marriages were registered in 2025, up 2.9% from the previous year. The average age at first marriage was 30.1 for women and 32.4 for men. Divorces declined by 2.6% to 13,173. Georgian Dream leaders have attributed the declining birth rate to what they call “ideological” factors. GD Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze, speaking during a February 18 interpellation session in the disputed parliament, described the current demographic trends as “one of the most painful and important topics” facing Georgia. He argued the decline stems from “grave ideological and worldview-related processes” rather than socio-economic reasons. He said the country had “largely freed itself from these [processes] only last year,” despite what he described as “immense foreign pressure.” As an example, he cited the backlash that followed the adoption of the anti-LGBT legislation “On Protection of Family Values and Minors.” He added that the government is ready to “engage in a more in-depth discussion on demographic issues” and on potential “incentive measures” to address the trends. Also Read: * 25/06/2025 – Georgian Population 3.9 Million in 2024, Geostat Preliminary Census Data Says * 30/03/2023 – The Main Demographic Indicators of Georgia in 2022 Published

Georgia Records Lowest Number of Births in Over Three Decades #Civil #Georgia

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Sokhumi, Tskhinvali, Moscow Digest – March 20-26, 2026 Below is the weekly digest of key developments and discourses in and around the occupied regions of Abkhazia and Tskhinvali/South Ossetia, as well as those concerning Tbilisi–Moscow relations. --- Sokhumi * Russian Energy Delegation Inspects Enguri HPP The delegation from the Russian Ministry of Energy carried out a working visit to Abkhazia, during which energy cooperation between Moscow and Sokhumi was discussed. The delegation conducted an inspection tour and reviewed the current operating conditions of the Enguri Hydroelectric Power Station. They also observed the ongoing implementation of the Russian-funded program to install electricity metering devices in Sokhumi. Both sides agreed to continue strengthening “bilateral” cooperation, emphasizing the importance of modernizing Abkhazia’s power grid and expanding metering systems to ensure the stable and reliable operation of the region’s energy system. * Armenia’s Ex-President Kocharyan Backs Railway Route Through Abkhazia to Russia Armenia’s economy, heavily reliant on Russia, could benefit from a shorter trade route through Abkhazia, according to former Armenian President and opposition “Armenia” bloc leader Robert Kocharyan. He noted that transporting goods via Azerbaijan adds an extra 700 km compared to a route passing through Georgia, including Abkhazia. “The current moment offers the most favorable conditions to begin negotiations on opening this route [through Abkhazia]. With Georgia’s EU membership process currently stalled, the country should be interested in establishing railway links with Russia. This would benefit Georgia, as well as Russia and Abkhazia,” Kocharyan said. Citing the political relations between Tbilisi and Sokhumi as the main obstacle, he proposed separating economic initiatives from political disputes. Discussions on the potential restoration of the railway connection have gained momentum in Abkhazia, especially following the agreement on the “Trump route” in the South Caucasus. The issue has also been raised at the official level in Russia. * De facto Authorities Consider Expanding Labor Restrictions for ‘Foreign Citizens‘ The de facto parliament has reviewed amendments to the so-called Law “On the Legal Status of Foreign Citizens,” which simplifies the mechanism for imposing restrictions on “foreign citizens” employment in certain sectors, this time focusing specifically on taxi operations. According to the explanatory note, the proposed amendments would allow the de facto authorities to introduce restrictions on “foreign citizens’” access to specific professions or positions, when deemed necessary, without amending the existing “law.” Instead, such restrictions will be imposed through decisions of the de facto Cabinet of Ministers. Following the discussions, the relevant “parliamentary committee” recommended adopting the amendments in the first reading at a “plenary session”. The so-called Law “On the Legal Status of Foreign Citizens”, adopted by the de facto authorities in 2015, has been widely viewed as disproportionately affecting the ethnic Georgian population in Abkhazia by significantly restricting their fundamental rights. While the current amendments may not specifically target the population of Gali and may instead be aimed at Russian citizens temporarily residing and working in Abkhazia, they are also likely to affect ethnic Georgians who do not hold the so-called Abkhaz passport. * Muftis of Kabardino-Balkaria and Abkhazia Sign Cooperation Agreement Muftis of Kabardino-Balkaria and Abkhazia signed a cooperation “agreement” that foresees the exchange of experience in religious, educational, outreach, and charitable activities aimed at strengthening the consolidation of Islamic and broader civic society in addressing pressing social issues. Clergy representatives will organize joint sermons, lectures, seminars, and roundtable discussions in mosques and educational institutions. The Spiritual Administrations of Muslims of Kabardino-Balkaria and Abkhazia also intend to implement joint initiatives focused on youth development, as well as support publishing and media activities, including the co-production of informational materials, books, brochures, and video content. * Abkhazia’s De Facto Justice Minister Proposes Expert Chamber in ‘Parliament’ Anri Bartsits, the de facto Minister of Justice of Abkhazia, has proposed establishing a bicameral parliament. Under his plan, one chamber would continue to consist of de facto MPs representing the direct will of the people, as it currently does, while the other would serve as an expert body composed of distinguished professionals, including scholars, lawyers, economists, and cultural figures. According to Bartsits, the proposal pursues two main goals. First, to strengthen public trust in “state institutions” by ensuring that decision-making reflects professionalism, logic, and responsibility, rather than “cheap populism”. Second, to establish a permanent professional center for advancing reforms, where decisions are based on knowledge rather than emotion. Tskhinvali * Simplification of Customs Procedures for ‘Citizens’ of ‘South Ossetia’ Discussed at ‘Nizhny Zaramag‘ Representatives of the customs committee of the occupied Tskhinvali region and the North Caucasus Directorate of the Federal Customs Service of the Russian Federation held a meeting at the “Nizhny Zaramag” border crossing point. The discussions focused on simplifying and expediting the temporary import of private vehicles belonging to South Ossetian citizens into the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), as well as on changing the traffic flow scheme to increase the checkpoint’s throughput capacity. It was proposed that the Federal Customs Service ease its measures towards South Ossetian “citizens” regarding vehicles not removed from the EAEU customs territory. Cases involving participants in the “Special Military Operation” [Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine] were considered separately, with decisions to be made individually. * Kadiy Speaks of Threats to Tskhinvali’s ‘Statehood’, Points to ‘Foreign’ Influence Speaking at a meeting of the “Ministry of Internal Affairs,” Yuri Kadiy, head of the occupied Tskhinvali region’s security service, identified key threats to the region, including gaps in legislation regarding the media and NGOs, and the growing influence of anonymously funded, foreign-backed resources attempting to destabilize the situation. He also noted the increased activity of foreign intelligence services and the risk of “citizens” being drawn into sabotage and cybercrime. “Today, part of the republic’s information space is in the hands of anonymous actors whose activities are funded from abroad,” Kadiy emphasized. He also reported on the rise in juvenile crime and drug-related threats. * Tskhinvali Issues 703 Work Permits to ‘Foreigners’ in 2025 Erislav Mamiev, the “Minister of Internal Affairs” of the occupied Tskhinvali region, announced that 703 work permits had been issued to “foreigners” over the course of the year. “We inspected 720 households and six farms where 1,654 foreign citizens are temporarily residing. A sum of 1,406,000 rubles was deposited with the National Bank,” he stated, adding that employees of the “Migration Department” had identified 42 violations of migration laws and that the total amount of fines had amounted to 99,000 rubles. * Gagloev Invited to Moscow by Putin to Attend May 9 Parade Alan Gagloev, the leader of the occupied Tskhinvali region, has received an official invitation from Russian President Vladimir Putin to visit Moscow on May 9. According to Gagloev’s press secretary, Natalya Bosikova, he will take part in the Victory Day Parade on Red Square as part of the visit. * Representatives of Russian, ‘South Ossetian’ Defense Agencies Meet in Tskhinvali A meeting took place in Tskhinvali between the “Ministry of Defense” of the occupied region and the Russian Defense Ministry, where they discussed a joint plan to strengthen the region’s armed forces, including the operation and repair of specialized equipment. Yuri Yarovitsky, the occupied region’s “Minister of Defense”, noted the importance of Russian support. Moscow-Tbilisi * Zakharova: Georgia’s Prosperity Lies ‘Not in Confrontation, But in Cooperation With Russia‘ Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said that she believes Tbilisi is beginning to understand that the “key” to Georgia’s prosperity lies “not in confrontation, but in cooperation with Russia” when discussing the prospects for political dialogue between the two countries. She made this comment during a March 25 press conference in response to a question from Nikoloz Mzhavanadze, a pro-Kremlin Georgian figure and founder of Georgia’s pro-Russia channel Sezoni TV, who introduced himself as a reporter for the Tao News agency. Read more here. * Moscow Links Normalization of Relations with Georgia to Tbilisi’s Willingness to Move Toward Rapprochement Russia has declared its readiness to normalize relations with Georgia. However, according to Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin, further progress depends on the position of Tbilisi, which severed diplomatic ties after the 2008 war. In an interview with the Russian newspaper Izvestia, Galuzin stated that “Everything depends on the Georgian side. It was not Russia that severed relations with Georgia, but the Saakashvili regime… We are ready to go as far as Georgia itself is willing to go in the process of normalizing relations.” Moscow emphasizes the immutability of its decision to recognize Abkhazia and “South Ossetia,” while Tbilisi links the restoration of relations to “de-occupation.” Izvestia notes that despite political differences, economic ties remain strong: trade volume grew to USD 2.7 billion in 2025, and tourism and air travel are developing rapidly. It also states that church relations remain an important factor. Following the death of Patriarch Ilia II, Georgia is preparing to elect a new Patriarch. The article notes that Metropolitan Shio is considered the leading candidate. The authors cite Mamuka Pipia, a pro-Kremlin figure and international secretary of the Solidarity for Peace party, who told the outlet: “We are confident that Shio will succeed because he is the successor to our patriarch’s work. He appointed him as locum tenens while he was still alive. We all trust his choice.” The article also states that “supporters of the unity of the Russian and Georgian Orthodox Churches fear that the new Patriarch may recognize the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU). Although the Georgian Orthodox Church has not actually agreed to its autocephaly, this issue was discussed at length in 2018–2019. While there are supporters of recognizing the OCU within the Georgian clergy, the official position remains cautious.” The article also notes that the ruling Georgian Dream party is seeking to maintain its influence over the church’s choice while continuing on its official course towards the EU and NATO. * RIA Novosti Links Story of Father Gabriel’s Prophecy to Ukraine’s Fate The RIA Novosti article describes the personality and spiritual legacy of Father Gabriel Urgebadze, a Georgian monk canonized by the Georgian Orthodox Church. It recounts his early conversion to the faith, his path to becoming a monk, his role as a holy fool, and the persecution he faced during the Soviet era, including his arrest for burning a portrait of Lenin and his subsequent forced treatment. The article also mentions that he is credited with prophecies about disasters and spiritual trials, including a vision of “Tbilisi in flames.” The outlet then cites Archpriest Mirian Alibegashvili’s account of a meeting with Father Gabriel in 1992, during which the latter allegedly uttered the phrase “The jester will destroy them all, will destroy Ukraine,” a prediction that would later be regarded as prescient. The article is accompanied by a photo of protests in Tbilisi, featuring a demonstrator waving a flag in front of flames, as well as an image of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Also Read: * 20/03/2026 – Sokhumi, Tskhinvali, Moscow Digest – March 14-19, 2026 * 14/03/2026 – Sokhumi, Tskhinvali, Moscow Digest – March 7-13, 2026

Sokhumi, Tskhinvali, Moscow Digest – March 20-26, 2026 #Civil #Georgia

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International Reactions to Elene Khoshtaria’s Prison Sentence The international actors and diplomatic missions in Georgia have widely condemned the prison sentence against opposition politician Elene Khoshtaria as disproportionate and politically motivated, describing the case as part of the Georgian Dream party’s broader crackdown on dissent. Elene Khoshtaria, leader of the Droa opposition party, was sentenced to one year and six months in prison after being found guilty of “property damage” for writing a protest message – “Russian Dream” – on Tbilisi Mayor Kakha Kaladze’s campaign banner in September. Tbilisi City Court Judge Giorgi Arevadze delivered the guilty verdict on March 24. The Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE), a major European political party composed of liberal and democratic parties, swiftly condemned the verdict as “wholly disproportionate,” calling for Khoshtaria’s “immediate release” and that “all politically motivated charges against her and fellow democratic opposition leaders and activists be dropped.” ALDE’s chair in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), Iulian Bulai, said separately that the “crime” for which Khoshtaria has been punished is “fighting for democracy in her country.” MEP Rasa Juknevičienė of the European People’s Party (EPP) stated on the same day that “political prisoners have no place in an EU candidate country,” adding that the European Parliament “stands in full solidarity with the Georgian people and political prisoners, as reaffirmed in its resolution earlier this March.” Ukrainian MP and ALDE’s Vice President Yevheniia Kravchuk said the launch of a criminal prosecution over an alleged minor damage to a banner was a “dangerous precedent,” arguing that the case is not about the “damage” but about “narrowing space for political expression and dissent.” Giorgi Gogia, Deputy Director of Europe and Central Asia Division at the Human Rights Watch, said the jail sentence “over a protest message” was a “stark indicator of how far democratic standards have eroded in Georgia,” describing Khoshtaria’s case as “part of a broader crackdown on dissent in the country.” Swedish Ambassador to Georgia Anna Lyberg, on March 25, said the verdict against Khoshtaria was “another example” of legal action against the opposition that “raises questions,” stressing that “rule of law, proportionality and freedom of expression are cornerstones of a free and democratic society.” Norwegian Ambassador Bergljot Hovland said the sentence was “disproportionate and unjustified,” adding that it “reinforces a troubling pattern of imprisonment of opposition leaders in Georgia and erodes both freedom of expression and public trust in democratic institutions.” The Estonian Embassy said it was “dismayed” by the verdict, quoting Roman statesman and lawyer Cicero, “Law applied to its extreme is the greatest injustice.” The U.S. Helsinki Commission reacted on March 26, saying in a post on X that Georgian Dream “is using the courts as a weapon to silence anyone who challenges their hold on power.” Georgian opposition politicians also condemned the ruling. Nika Gvaramia of Ahali, speaking on behalf of the opposition alliance of nine parties, said that Khoshtaria was punished for “loving her homeland” and “not giving up,” adding, “If anyone has to give up, it will be [Bidzina] Ivanishvili.” In a joint statement, 22 women politicians said, “For a mother of four [Elene Khoshtaria], a year-and-a-half prison sentence is more than just injustice. It is a clear reflection of the deep moral crisis of the illegitimate government.” Meanwhile, Speaker of the disputed Parliament, Shalva Papuashvili, lashed out at those condemning the sentence, saying Khoshtaria and “people like her” are “personal prisoners of the Helsinki Commission and similar [foreign groups].” In a March 27 comment to reporters in Parliament, Papuashvili said that such foreign actors “incite them to commit crimes to later stage discussions, resolutions, statements, and so on.” Khoshtaria, along with seven other opposition leaders, also faces an even harsher sentence in a separate “sabotage” case, in which they are accused of “crimes against the state.” * 17/09/2025 – Court Sets Bail for Elene Khoshtaria, But She Refuses to Pay * 15/09/2025 – Update: Elene Khoshtaria Detained Amid Criminal Probe on ‘Damaging’ Kaladze Banners

International Reactions to Elene Khoshtaria’s Prison Sentence #Civil #Georgia

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This seminar sits at the intersection of environmental science, public health, education, and policy — #Architecture, #Civil & #EnvironmentalEngineering, #PublicHealth & #Epidemiology, #Psychology & #Education, #EnvironmentalScience & #Sustainability, #SocialPolicy & #UrbanPlanning.

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CJF abre prazo para propostas na 10ª Jornada de Direito Civil

CJF abre prazo para propostas na 10ª Jornada de Direito Civil

#DireitoCivil #Civil #direitocivil #Jornada CJF abre prazo para propostas na 10ª Jornada de Direito CivilA 10ª Jornada de Direito Civil é um evento essencial para profissionais do Direito, oferecendo palestras, workshops e oportunidades de networking. Com...

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Thales supports Dominican Republic’s biometric passport system upgrade Thales , together with local consortium partner Midas Dominicana, is providing the technology and technical expertise for th...

#Biometrics #News #Border #and #Port #Security #Civil […]

[Original post on biometricupdate.com]

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Original post on biometricupdate.com

Thales supports Dominican Republic’s biometric passport system upgrade Thales , together with local consortium partner Midas Dominicana, is providing the technology and technical expertise for th...

#Biometrics #News #Border #and #Port #Security #Civil […]

[Original post on biometricupdate.com]

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Georgia in NATO Secretary General’s 2025 Report NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte’s 2025 annual report, presented on March 26, states that elements of NATO-Georgia cooperation were “reprioritised” following the 2024 parliamentary elections and “their aftermath.” Rutte separately said during a press conference that NATO sees “serious worries” about Georgia’s democratic trajectory, calling on Tbilisi to return to a “pro-EU, European-forward-looking approach.” The report discusses Georgia in a section concerning the wider South Caucasus region. After the paragraph on Armenia and Azerbaijan, it says, “Allies also reviewed NATO’s engagement with Georgia in light of the 2024 parliamentary elections and their aftermath. As a result, elements of NATO-Georgia cooperation were reprioritised, including some aspects of the Substantial NATO-Georgia Package.” “At the same time, defence cooperation with the Georgian Defence Forces progressed, highlighted by the successful NATO-Georgia exercise in May,” it adds. “The NATO Liaison Office in Tbilisi, Georgia continued active engagement with all three partners across the South Caucasus region.” The report describes the South Caucasus as “important” for NATO’s security, “especially as the region continues to feel the impact of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine.” The document highlights regional developments, stating that “in 2025, NATO welcomed meaningful progress towards peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” including the U.S.-brokered August peace agreement, adding that NATO “stands ready to deepen dialogue and cooperation with both countries.” Presenting the report, Secretary General Mark Rutte was asked to comment on how NATO assesses the Georgian Dream government’s recently adopted restrictive legislation and the jailing of some opposition figures. “When it comes to Georgia, obviously, we coordinate closely with the European Union,” he said. “When it comes to the relationship between NATO and Georgia, we think there is merit in keeping that relationship going,” he added, “But, of course, we also have to recognize recent developments.” “That is why we call upon Georgia to return to the path of a more pro-EU, European-forward-looking approach, including making sure that all the developments, [..] the whole trajectory Georgia was on in terms of democracy, rule of law, is continued,” he said, adding, “Obviously, there are serious worries at the moment.” Also Read: * 25/04/2025 – Georgia in NATO Secretary General’s 2024 Annual Report * 18/03/2024 – Georgia in NATO Secretary General’s 2023 Annual Report * 22/03/2023 – Georgia in NATO Secretary General’s 2022 Annual Report

Georgia in NATO Secretary General’s 2025 Report #Civil #Georgia

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437 - Good Governance Improves Personal Outcomes and Strengthens National Purpose How U.S. Ratings Slide

Excellent read. #civil #politics#peace
open.substack.com/pub/robertir...

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Zakharova: Georgia’s Prosperity Lies ‘Not in Confrontation, But in Cooperation With Russia” Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said that she believes Tbilisi is beginning to understand that the “key” to Georgia’s prosperity lies “not in confrontation, but in cooperation with Russia” when discussing the prospects for political dialogue between the two countries. She made this comment during a March 25 press conference in response to a question from Nikoloz Mzhavanadze, a pro-Kremlin Georgian figure and founder of Georgia’s pro-Russia channel Sezoni TV, who introduced himself as a reporter for the Tao News agency. Mzhavanadze, who began his question by thanking Russian President Vladimir Putin, the Russian Orthodox Church, and the Russian people for “honoring” the late Georgian patriarch Ilia II, asked what “practical and diplomatic impetus” could follow after Mikhail Shvydkoy, Putin’s Special Representative for International Cultural Cooperation, attended the funeral service for Ilia II in Tbilisi and conveyed condolence on Putin’s behalf. Zakharova started by emphasizing that Russia had received the news of the Georgian Patriarch’s passing “with deep sorrow,” describing the late patriarch as a “true spiritual leader” who had sought to preserve Orthodox unity and uphold traditional values. She then said that the two peoples are “bound by the closest historical ties” and, despite what she called “well-known political disagreements on certain issues,” Russia “encourages” the development of bilateral relations. She added, “It appears that the Georgian side is also interested in constructive relations with Russia,” and claimed that interaction with Russia is “one of the key factors” behind Georgia’s “unprecedented” economic growth. Claiming that Russia’s ties with Georgia are “natural” and “not artificially imposed,” Zakharova said, “We do not follow Western practices – we do not allow them to be applied to us, nor do we ever adhere to such approaches ourselves.” She added that, in the absence of diplomatic relations, Russia focuses its efforts on developing people-to-people contacts and economic cooperation with Georgia. She then pointed to several economic figures, including trade turnover between the two countries and major trading products. “It is also highly notable that, overall, CIS countries account for 70% of Georgian exports – many times more than the EU share,” Zakharova claimed, “This is significant.” “These figures illustrate the lack of real results from the free trade agreement concluded between Georgia and the EU back in 2014,” she continued. “Statistics contradict EU propaganda. No one in Brussels ever intended to open its market to Georgian goods…In practice, nothing has happened, nothing exists, and nothing will.” She then discussed tourism ties between the two countries. Speaking on the prospects for political dialogue, Zakharova reiterated that Moscow is ready for what she called “substantive discussions” with Tbilisi, “if and when” the latter is ready to engage. She attributed the refusal to engage in dialogue to the “legacy of the criminal and reckless regime of [Mikheil] Saakashvili,” adding, “Rationally justifying the benefits of such an approach for Georgia is probably difficult.” “I believe that in Tbilisi, realizing the true objectives of the West regarding their country, they begin to understand that the key to Georgia’s prosperity lies not in confrontation, but in cooperation with Russia,” she added. Russia regularly says it is open to normalizing relations with Georgia but insists that Tbilisi’s recognition of Abkhazia and Tskhinvali is a prerequisite for resuming political dialogue. Tbilisi maintains that diplomatic relations with Moscow will not be resumed while the occupation continues. Also Read: * 23/01/2026 – Zakharova Praises Georgia for Maintaining Ties with Russia Despite ‘Western Pressure’ * 03/12/2025 – Russia Open to Normalizing Ties With Georgia, Sees No Ground for Political Dialogue * 09/10/2025 – Russian MFA Praises Georgia’s October 4 Vote, Accuses Western ‘Actors’ of Interference * 06/10/2025 – Russia Feels its Worldview Vindicated by Tbilisi Events * 08/08/2025 – On War Anniversary, Zakharova Calls for ‘Concrete Practical Steps’ from Tbilisi

Zakharova: Georgia’s Prosperity Lies ‘Not in Confrontation, But in Cooperation With Russia” #Civil #Georgia

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CoE Committee of Ministers: 77 ECtHR Cases Against Georgia Pending Execution The Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers, which oversees the implementation of the European Court of Human Rights rulings, published its annual report on March 25, according to which in 2025, it received eleven new cases from the ECtHR against Georgia, while 77 cases were pending execution. Seven cases were closed, full payment of just satisfaction was confirmed in nine, and delays were reported in five. According to the report, the 11 new cases received from the Court for supervision of their execution were slightly fewer than 13 in 2024 and 15 in 2023. “Of the new violations found by the Court in 2025, most of them concerned the excessive length of judicial proceedings and issues related to freedom of assembly,” the report said, adding, “One new case concerned the excessive use of force by the police during the dispersal of a demonstration.” By the end of 2025, 77 cases were pending implementation, compared to 73 in 2024 and 78 in 2023. Of these, nine leading cases were classified under the “enhanced procedure,” while 20 were under the “standard procedure.” According to the report, “Of the leading cases under enhanced procedure, five have been pending for five years or more; similarly, nine of the leading cases under standard procedure have been pending for five years or more (compared to nine in 2024 and eight in 2023).” According to the report, since Georgia ratified the European Convention on Human Rights, a total of 202 cases have been brought before the Committee of Ministers, including 82 leading and 120 repetitive cases. Actions Plans/Reports In 2025, the Georgian authorities submitted seven action plans and 15 action reports to the Committee of Ministers. Updates were still awaited in four groups/cases where feedback had been provided before the start of the year. Just satisfaction Full payment of just satisfaction was confirmed in nine cases in 2025. However, confirmation of payment and/or default interest remained pending in five cases, “for which the deadline indicated in the Court’s judgment has passed since more than six months.” Closures, Main Achievements The Committee of Ministers closed seven cases against Georgia in 2025, including two leading cases under “standard supervision.” One of these concerned “the violation of the right to respect for family life, following the evolution of judicial practice related to the best interests of the child in proceedings under the 1980 Hague Convention on the civil aspects of international child abduction.” The report added that “five repetitive cases were closed because no further individual measures were necessary or possible.” Main Examined Issues The annual report said that throughout 2025, the Committee of Ministers examined and adopted decisions on five leading cases/groups “under enhanced procedure.” * The Tsintsabadze group of cases concerned the “lack of effective investigations into allegations of ill-treatment or violations of the right to life; excessive use of force by the police in the course of arrest and/or while detaining suspects.” * The Merabishvili case highlighted the “failure by the domestic courts to give relevant and sufficient reasons to justify continuation of detention on remand; continued detention on remand with predominant purpose of obtaining information from the applicant about third persons.” * A.D. and Others case showed “the lack of legislation governing procedures for legal gender recognition.” * The Identoba and Others group of cases pointed to “the lack of protection against homophobic attacks or religiously motivated attacks.” * Makarashvili and Others Case, concerned “violations of the rights to freedom of assembly and fair trial on account of administrative convictions in the context of demonstrations, and violation of the right to liberty and security on account of arbitrary administrative arrest and detention.” The report noted that the pending caseload includes notably cases concerning “the failure to take preventive action regarding domestic violence and the failure to investigate the law-enforcement authorities’ inaction; the length of judicial proceedings and the absence of an effective remedy in this respect; the right to a fair trial and the impartiality of a tribunal.” Interstate Cases Involving Russia Georgia is also referenced in the context of interstate and conflict-related cases against Russia. These include one case concerning “the arrest, detention and expulsion from the Russian Federation of large numbers of Georgian nationals” between September 2006 and January 2007, and another “concerning various violations of the Convention in the context of the armed conflict between the Russian Federation and Georgia in August 2008.” The report said that the Committee of Ministers “exhorted the Russian authorities to abide fully, effectively, and promptly by the final judgments of the European Court and insisted again firmly on the unconditional obligation of Russia to pay without further delay the just satisfaction amounts awarded by the European Court along with the interest accrued.” Also Read: * 23/01/2026 – GYLA Says ECtHR Began Examining Complaints over Georgia’s Disputed 2024 Parliamentary Elections * 20/01/2026 – ECtHR Finds Rights Violation in Conviction of Protester at 2023 Rally Against Agents Law * 05/02/2024 – ECHR Received 156 Applications Against Georgia in 2023

CoE Committee of Ministers: 77 ECtHR Cases Against Georgia Pending Execution #Civil #Georgia

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Ukraine Says It Identified Hungarian Spy Chief Who Operated in Georgia Under Diplomatic Cover Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) said it identified a Hungarian military intelligence officer who led a spy network in western Ukraine after operating for years in Georgia under diplomatic cover. The man has been identified as Zoltán Andre. “From 2016 to 2020, Andre was in Georgia, where he conducted intelligence activities under the cover of a representative of Hungary’s diplomatic mission,” the SBU said in a March 23 statement, adding, “After returning from the South Caucasus, he began intelligence and subversive activities against Ukraine in 2021.” According to the report, Andre led a spy network in Ukraine’s western Zakarpattia region, which was uncovered in spring 2025. The SBU said it detained two members of this spy cell who were “collecting information on the region’s military defenses, local socio-political sentiment, and possible public reaction in the event of Hungarian troops entering the area.” According to the agency, Andre used diplomatic institutions for recruitment and promised remuneration. Tbilisi has not yet commented on the SBU’s statement. Also Read: * 20/05/2025 – Georgian Intelligence to Be Absorbed by State Security Service

Ukraine Says It Identified Hungarian Spy Chief Who Operated in Georgia Under Diplomatic Cover #Civil #Georgia

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Breaking: Queensland man charged over alleged plans to fight in Myanmar civil war Police allege the 33-year-old travelled to Thailand in January with plans to travel onward to Myanmar to engage in "hostile activities" with an armed group engaged in the ongoing conflict. #police #courts #civil #war

Police allege the 33-year-old travelled to Thailand in January with plans to travel onward to Myanmar to engage in "hostile activities" with an armed group engaged in the ongoing conflict. #police #courts #civil #war

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Kansas Senate embraces bill to compel age-verification, parental consent on app downloads App-store verification, parental consent bill lurches through Kansas Legislature as a vehicle to protect te...

#Civil #Rights #Politics #+ #Government #age […]

[Original post on kansasreflector.com]

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AI Cites Its Civil War Source If it “mines” the Internet for data, then artificial intelligence recently identified the Civil War “mine” from which it stole intellectual value. Its develope...

#Emerging #Civil #War #Internet, #Websites #& #Blogs #AI […]

[Original post on emergingcivilwar.com]

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National Bank Says It Purchased $429 Million in Foreign Currency in February The National Bank of Georgia (NBG) said it purchased USD 429.3 million on the Bmatch trading platform in February, bringing the country’s international reserves to USD 6.65 billion. The February figure follows net purchases of USD 86.6 million in January and reflects the NBG’s policy of building up foreign exchange reserves over the past year. The NBG reiterated that “international foreign exchange reserves are an important guarantee of a country’s macroeconomic stability” and that it increases reserves “when market conditions allow.” Updated data are expected to be released on April 27. Also Read: * 25/03/2026 – NBG Keeps Key Refinancing Rate Unchanged at 8% * 08/01/2026 – NBG: International Reserves Reach ‘Historic High’ of More Than $6 Billion * 08/11/2024 – Foreign Exchange Reserves Fall Sharply as NBG Sells Record Amount of Dollars in October

National Bank Says It Purchased $429 Million in Foreign Currency in February #Civil #Georgia

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Dispatch – March 25: This is fine It was February 20, a Friday afternoon, when the bank messaged me that my accounts were blocked. I was sitting at my desk, and my first reaction was one of irritation. I did not have time for this. I was not surprised, or shocked, or angry, and neither did I feel the dread I would have once expected from my longtime, dystopian fear that this is how it all starts — “first they freeze your bank accounts.” The bank’s message was short, misspelled, and written in Latin script but in Georgian words. It did not contain any explanation. But I knew right away what it was. --- Here is Nini and the Dispatch newsletter, to tell about minor inconveniences that build a major repressive bureaucracy. --- I wasn’t the first. As winter came, a growing number of politically active citizens reported similar disruptions. They, too, learned only after receiving bank messages that the aptly named Enforcement Bureau had blocked their accounts because of unpaid protest-related fines they knew nothing about. The only way to avoid the inconvenience was to call the Patrol Police hotline and ask whether there was any fine in your name. This would have given you time to appeal it before it was passed for enforcement. Easier said than done for those who suffer from phone anxiety, or simply hate the absurdity of calling some stranger to ask whether, by any chance, you are guilty of something. — Good morning, officer! Are you mad at me? And then there was the false confidence I had developed after more than a year of covering protests and being surprisingly spared similar trouble. Perhaps I had that face – invisible to cameras, unreadable by AI, or tortured enough to awaken empathy even in the most cold-blooded employees of the Interior Ministry. In the end, that illusion cost me a longer, harder hustle of trying to get my accounts back. Still, I chose to embrace the experience: if anyone could afford this illuminating adventure, it was me, a lone reporter and editor. Hell of Niceties It was indeed nice at first. You get plenty of support in the initial days: friends offer emergency cash and cards, and kind lawyers offer free advice. Even the “relevant authorities” seem helpful. The number of thank-yous and niceties I exchanged when calling Patrol Police and Enforcement Bureau hotlines to find out what I had done wrong gave me a rush of endorphins. I even made repeated calls just to double-check. Once you go to hell, everyone’s apparently super-friendly in showing you the right fire to burn in. Or maybe that’s what hell actually is: an endless wandering and asking around what your sins are, and which furnace to jump into. That’s how I found out I had a good old GEL 5,000 (≈USD 1,800) fine for “blocking” Tbilisi’s Rustaveli Avenue on July 17. I was covering protests as a journalist that day. Luckily, I had also published the material online. But I hadn’t seen police footage, so I had to make sure first that I hadn’t forgotten to display my press badge or somehow misbehaved or created a wrong impression. What was I wearing? Maybe I did deserve to be fined $1,800 for standing on the roadway, and then not to be notified, and then to have my accounts frozen. Stuck in that uncertainty, I started my journey. I made circles around the city to collect the papers. Frozen accounts didn’t make going from one end of the capital to the other any easier. But I was learning to appreciate the music coming from a growing pile of coins in my pockets, and more in-person niceties that awaited me in those government agencies. A lady in the Patrol Police service center – the word “love” tattooed on her hand – gave me a copy of the police report and also tips on how to stop the enforcement, without me even asking. Only after that was I able to check my fine ticket on the government portals. The websites, too – thanks to whatever reforms from whatever years – openly and sincerely confirmed that I had never been notified about the fine, which strengthened my case. They could have lied about it, right? It took another couple of days of back-and-forth running to assemble the evidence for my first-ever court appeal. I was in a hurry, fearing any delay would lead to the loss of my bank savings, with no hope of ever getting them back. I finally went to court on Friday, a week after that bank message, and the last minutes felt like applying for one of those Western scholarships, where you nervously check whether you had included the list of all of your grandmother’s teenage crushes as requested, and whether your language is inhuman enough for the selection committee to take you seriously. I was lucky again: I submitted it on the first try. Guiltocracy Now all that was left was to return to the Patrol Police, present the certificate that I appealed, and request that they halt enforcement until the court ruling. They were, again, happy to help. Things happened while I was chasing papers. The UK sanctioned two Georgian pro‑government television channels, and U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran escalated into a wider regional conflict. And I was slowly noticing that, while focusing on this nice adventure of mine, I had started to overthink and stress about everything else in my life. The procedures were eating into my work duties, and half of that time had already been swallowed by what I call survival work: all the additional tasks media outlets must handle to survive in an increasingly repressive environment. That’s when you also realize why it is that most repression in Georgia comes through laws, rather than authorities just randomly stopping you in the streets and arresting you or slapping you in the face – because… why not? Instead of directly crushing you, they outlaw your existence, amendment by amendment, procedure by procedure. And when you are finally crushed, it’s with the sense that it’s not them, but YOU who did something wrong: you were the one who didn’t follow procedures, who wasn’t perfect or smart enough to navigate the maze. Rule by guilt is far more effective than rule by fists. Instead of ethics of right and wrong, you have ethics of legal or illegal. But even if you abide by those laws, there’s still room for minor inconveniences: some officer might catch you on camera while you work, and trace your face in databases, and then another officer may issue a fine, and another one may never bother notifying you, and someone else might pass it for enforcement, and someone else might end up freezing your accounts. But remedies are still in place. All you have to do is follow the procedures again: calls, documents, courts, appeals. If you have time. Who’s Them? It took me about two weeks after the bank’s message to regain access to my accounts. Another week passed before I could collect the case files – now mistakenly sent to my childhood home in Western Georgia – to finally see what was on the surveillance video. The wrongdoing was a short footage showing me approaching a march in front of the Parliament and filming it. An observant eye would have noticed the press badge and identification I was wearing. I was perfect. Whew. It will probably take weeks or months for the court to rule on my still-active fine. It may take even longer before the sense of constant bureaucratic alarm, of doing something wrong, leaves my body. And it might take a while for me to understand what – or who – that two-faced bureaucracy really is, oppressing and helping you all at the same time. Is it a large, evil, or banally evil structure with a sole purpose to punish, gaslight, drain, and ignore? Or is it a more complex, mixed creature, containing remnants of reforms once meant to protect you, and at least some of the personnel who are consciously willing to help? --- *** Speaking of survival, you can help Civil.ge navigate – and cover – the increasingly repressive environment by becoming our Member and subscribing to our Daily Cable newsletter, where we tell you more in-depth about Georgia’s daily hustle.

Dispatch – March 25: This is fine #Civil #Georgia

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NBG Keeps Key Refinancing Rate Unchanged at 8% The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the National Bank of Georgia (NBG) has decided to keep the key refinancing rate unchanged at 8%, where it has stood since May 2024. The Committee said that it stands ready to maintain a “tight stance” should “inflationary shocks” from the ongoing “geopolitical situation” persist. In March 25’s statement, the National Bank pointed to “heightened geopolitical tensions” in the Middle East and “substantial disruptions” to transit through the Strait of Hormuz, saying the temporary disruption of traditional supply chains resulted in a “marked increase” in energy and shipping costs on international markets. It warned that if these dynamics persist, “they could increase the risk of inflationary processes becoming more broad-based globally.” According to the NBG, before “the escalation of geopolitical tensions,” inflation dynamics were broadly in line with its core scenario, which projected a return to the 3% target from the second quarter of 2026. Citing that inflation in February stood at 4.6%, the Bank said that “the contribution of food prices to inflation has begun to moderate,” while measures of sticky prices and inflation expectations remain “broadly anchored around the target.” “Amid ongoing geopolitical developments, the recent rise in oil prices has already been partially transmitted to the Georgian market and is expected to push headline inflation higher in March,” the Bank said, adding that inflation will likely exceed its central scenario in the short term, while the medium-term outlook “largely depends on the intensity and persistence of global inflationary pressures,” which remain highly uncertain. The Committee outlined two alternative scenarios that could shape future monetary policy decisions. In a high-inflation risk scenario, sustained high levels of energy prices could increase global shipping and production costs, “generating additional supply-side shocks.” The NBG warned that “successive shocks” could increase the risk of second-round inflationary effects. In such a case, tighter monetary policies in advanced economies could trigger capital outflows from emerging markets, increasing imported inflation in Georgia. “Should these risks materialize, fundamental processes would necessitate a higher trajectory for the monetary policy rate,” the Bank said. In a low-inflation risk scenario, the Bank said pressures could prove temporary if “disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz are resolved relatively quickly, and supply from other oil-producing countries increases,” leading to a decline in energy prices. It added that if Georgia’s “sovereign risk premium remains low for an extended period, the external balance could further improve, exerting downward pressure on inflation,” noting that “the realization of low inflation risks would imply the possibility of easing the monetary policy stance.” “As a result of the ongoing macroeconomic analysis and consideration of existing risks, the MPC considered it optimal to leave the monetary policy rate unchanged at 8 percent,” the NBG said. The central bank added that it will continue to “actively monitor” ongoing geopolitical developments, amid “heightened uncertainty” and their “transmission” to Georgia’s domestic market. It reiterated that it is prepared to maintain the current tight stance longer than expected and “if necessary, to tighten it further.” The next Monetary Policy Committee meeting is scheduled for May 6, 2026. Also Read: * 25/02/2026 – National Bank Says It Purchased $86.6 Million in Foreign Currency in January * 11/02/2026 – NBG Keeps Key Refinancing Rate Unchanged at 8%

NBG Keeps Key Refinancing Rate Unchanged at 8% #Civil #Georgia

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De Facto Donetsk Court Sentences Georgian Fighter in Absentia to 14 Years The “Supreme Court” of the Russian-occupied Ukrainian region of Donetsk sentenced Georgian national Shmagi Dighmelashvili in absentia to 14 years in a “maximum-security penal colony” for fighting on Ukraine’s side “as a mercenary.” He has been placed on an international wanted list. The Donetsk de facto prosecutor’s office said in a March 23 statement that Dighmelashvili, 42, joined the Georgian National Legion in March 2022. The Georgian National Legion is a prominent unit of mostly Georgian fighters who have been fighting in Ukraine since 2014. In 2024, Russia designated it as a terrorist organization in Russia. The de facto prosecutor’s office said that Dighmelashvili underwent military training at a Ukrainian Armed Forces training base and fought against Russian troops through 2025. It further claimed that he received 3.5 million rubles as a “reward.” Also Read: * 07/03/2026 – De Facto Donetsk Court Sentences Georgian Lawyer Beka Basilaia to 14 Years in Absentia * 11/02/2026 – Donetsk Court Sentences Georgian Fighter in Ukraine to Life in Prison * 03/02/2026 – Donetsk Court Sentences Georgian Opposition Politician to 6.5 Years for Fighting in Ukraine * 26/12/2025 – Russia-Backed Court Sentences Georgian Medic to 15 Years in Absentia

De Facto Donetsk Court Sentences Georgian Fighter in Absentia to 14 Years #Civil #Georgia

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