Become an OC Media MemberSupport independent journalism in the Caucasus:
Join Today
Media logo
Georgia

Georgian foreign agent law protester freed after year in prison

Lazare Grigoriadis speaking to journalists on his release. Photo: Mariam Nikuradze/OC Media
Lazare Grigoriadis speaking to journalists on his release. Photo: Mariam Nikuradze/OC Media

Lazare Grigoriadis, convicted of violence during the anti-government protests in Tbilisi in March last year, has been released from prison following President Salome Zourabichvili’s pardon

Zourabichvili announced her decision hours after Grigoriadis was sentenced on 12 April to nine years in prison on charges of arson and attacking a police officer during the March 2023 protests against Georgia’s draft foreign agent law. His release from Tbilisi’s Gldani prison comes as the ruling party are once again attempting to bring the controversial legislation back.

Upon his release, Grigoriadis thanked president Zourabichvili, the media, and his supporters, and vowed to rejoin the renewed protests against the foreign agent draft bill later the same day.  

Grigoriadis hugged family and friends on his release from prison. Photo: Mariam Nikuradze/OC Media

‘It undermines our democracy, and I think we can’t adopt laws like this [while we’re] on our path towards the European Union’, Grigoriadis said before the pool of journalists.

[Read more: Georgian foreign agent bill passes first reading in parliament amidst massive protests]

Critics have claimed that the case was politicised from the outset. Current Georgian PM and then Georgian Dream chair, Irakli Kobakhidze, and Irakli Gharibashvili, with whom Kobakhidze swapped places in February, insisted on Grigoriadis’ guilt long before the judge found him guilty. 

Kobakhidze also suggested that Grigoriadis had his ‘orientations all messed up’, while pro-government channels frequently shared images of Grigoriadis that made prominent his distinctive facial tattoos, bleached hair, and jewellery. 

Supporters of Lazare Grigoriadis outside the parliament building in Tbilisi in June 2023. Image: OC Media

Despite Zourabichvili’s announcement over a week ago, Grigoriadis remained imprisoned until Wednesday, reportedly because the president was not provided with the documents required to formalise the pardon. 

Grigoriadis’s lawyers claimed that the process of Grigoriadis’ release was drawn out as a result of judge Zviad Sharadze designating the case as ‘complicated’, and thereby prolonging the time required to produce the documents formalising his conviction. 

After being detained on 29 March last year, Lazare Grigoriadis spent almost thirteen months in pre-trial detention before eventually being found guilty, a verdict that his representatives dismissed as politically motivated. 

 

Related Articles

Screenshots of Azerbaijani state news agency Azertac’s coverage of Georgian politics and elections.
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Azerbaijani state media cover Georgian Dream’s pre-election campaign

A

Over the last month, Azerbaijan’s official government news agency Azertac has published multiple articles focusing on ethnic Azerbaijani candidates running for the ruling Georgian Dream party, while failing to provide a platform for Azerbaijani opposition candidates.  On 16 October, Azertac interviewed Georgian Dream MP Zaur Darghalli, who said that his party had guaranteed stability in Georgia, and elaborated on how it was able to keep the peace for the last 12 years.  ‘These elections are

Illustration by Tamar Shvelidze/OC Media.
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Podcast | Georgia gears up for the 2024 parliamentary elections

O

With Georgia’s parliamentary elections inching closer, both the ruling Georgian Dream party and the many groups representing the opposition are scrambling to prepare for the critical vote on 26 October. This week, OC Media’s Robin Fabbro, Mariam Nikuradze, and Shota Kincha discuss how the pre-election campaign period has been going, claims of electoral violations by Georgian Dream, and the atmosphere in Georgia ahead of the vote. Read more: * Who’s who in Georgia’s pa

Illustration: Tamar Shvelidze/OC Media.
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Ranking Georgia’s political parties by gender balance in the 2024 elections

S

Georgia’s parliamentary elections on 26 October, unlike the previous vote, will be held without any gender quotas. As women’s representation in Georgian politics remains an issue, we have examined the electoral lists of all the major parties and groupings and ranked them based on how many women they included — and how highly they were placed. The ruling Georgian Dream party pushed through mandatory gender quotas ahead of the 2020 parliamentary and 2021 local elections in an apparent bid to pro

TikTok. OC Media
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Deep fakes ‘target’ Georgian opposition on TikTok ahead of elections

S

A Georgian elections watchdog has published a report outlining the increased use of AI technology in the pre-election period, including the creation of deep fakes based on opposition politicians. On Tuesday, the International Society for Fair Elections and Democracy (ISFED) reported that anonymous actors had used AI technologies to forge the voices of Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili and For Georgia chair Giorgi Gakharia in videos shared on social media. According to ISFED, one such a

Most Popular

Editor‘s Picks