Media logo
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Georgian police arrest UNM members of Tbilisi City Council

Still from video showing Irakli Edzgveradze’s arrest. Screenshots via RFE/RL.
Still from video showing Irakli Edzgveradze’s arrest. Screenshots via RFE/RL.

Georgian Police have arrested two members of the Tbilisi City Council from the opposition United National Movement. While one has since been released, the other remains in pre-trial detention and has accused the police of physical abuse.

The two have been charged with disorderly conduct and disobeying police, and face fines or up to 15 days administrative arrest.

UNM member Irakli Edzgveradze, who remains in custody, was arrested near his home in Tbilisi on Wednesday evening. 

Footage of the arrest was circulated in the media, showing a confrontation between the people gathered at the scene and law enforcement officers.

According to police, Edzgveradze was arrested after intervening in an unrelated drug investigation in his neighbourhood.

The second detainee, Irakli Nadiradze, told journalists on Thursday that he was arrested after hearing of his colleague’s detention and travelling to his home to ask why he was taken into custody. 

‘They detained me without any explanation. First they told me that I was not arrested, they were waiting for instructions, and then they took me to a specific building and let us out with a handwritten note’, Nadiradze said.

‘We will probably have a trial and they will probably put us in jail for two weeks or fine us, as Georgian Dream is used to doing’, he added.

Nadiradze said the purpose of the detentions serve is to interfere with the election campaign. 

‘We want to talk about people’s problems, people’s hardships. We meet people, and they [Georgian Dream] don’t like that we talk about these people’s problems’.

In a statement on Wednesday, the UNM accused police officers of using ‘physical force’  against supporters of Edzgveradze and Nadiradze.

Edzgveradze’s lawyer, Lasha Tkesheladze, accused the police of abusing his client in custody.

‘[Edzgveradze] seems to have bruises on his body. He also appears to have bruises around his neck. Irakli says that he was abused in a garage’, he said.

Tkesheladze called on the Special Investigation Service and the public defender to investigate the case.

Several opposition leaders linked the arrests to a statement by Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze on Wednesday that the ‘radical opposition’ might be ‘at risk’ of attacks orchestrated by their own members.

[Read more: Georgian Prime Minister warns that opposition might be ‘at risk of attack’ by themselves]

Read in Armenian on CivilNet.

Related Articles

The protest in Tbilisi. Photo: Salome Khvedelidze/OC Media
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Explainer | After a month of simmering protests, Georgia erupted: why now?

Avatar

At a moment when it appeared as if demonstrations against electoral fraud and democratic backsliding had fallen into a feeling of bitter acceptance, protests in Georgia exploded suddenly on 28 November after Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze announced the government was suspending its bid for EU accession until 2028. But why did the government choose to take such an unpopular move? And why was this the trigger for such mass discontent? In Tbilisi and other cities and towns across the country

Georgia's Constitutional Court. Official photo.
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Georgia’s Constitutional Court rejects Zourabichvili and opposition appeals

Avatar

Georgia’s Constitutional Court has dismissed a lawsuit submitted by Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili and opposition parties against the 26 October parliamentary elections. There were two dissenting opinions — by judges Giorgi Kverenchkhiladze and  Teimuraz Tughushi — both of which were based on concerns regarding the availability of participation in the elections for voters living abroad. Tughushi’s dissenting opinion also focused on concerns related to the secrecy of voting. The ruli

Protesters clash with police in Tbilisi on 2 December. Via Mariam Nikuradze/OC Media
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Protests continued unabated for fifth day over Georgia’s EU U-turn

Avatar

During the fifth day of protest in front of the parliament of Georgia, confrontations between protesters using fireworks and riot police using water cannons, tear gas, paper spray, and targeted beatings continued overnight. Amid the ongoing unrest, Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze offered ‘dialogue in any format’ to those protesting ‘sincerely’. Reports of law enforcement officers physically abusing detainees and demonstrators continued throughout the day. In the early morning, Zura Japar

Most Popular

Editor‘s Picks