One man has been shot dead and three more hospitalised after a conflict broke out between two families in Georgia’s Pankisi Valley.
The incident occurred on Wednesday afternoon in the village of Sakobiano after members of the Mutoshvili and Kavtarashvili families gathered in the village centre earlier that day.
Local environmental activist Luisa Mutoshvili, who said the deceased, Malkhaz Mutoshvili, was her uncle, told Georgian news agency IPN that the conflict was not personal.
‘This is a conflict that started over the construction of hydropower plants. People who lobbied for HPPs [Hydroelectric power plants] in the region, with the government and the police at their backs, killed a man who was against constructing HPPs. The people openly lobbying this issue in the region are the Kavtarashvilis and Pareulidzes’, Mutoshvili said.
She added that the conflict started ‘1-2 months ago’.
Following the deadly shootout, Khaso Khangoshvili, the head of the Council of Elders — a traditional ruling body in the valley — denied it was related to hydropower plants. He said it originated from a conflict between two young people three months ago.
The Interior Ministry has launched an investigation for ‘premeditated murder’.
Controversial plants
Two planned hydropower projects in Pankisi Valley, Khadori 3 and Samkuristskali 2, have been a source of controversy between the government and many local residents.
The sudden resumption of construction on Khadori 3 in the village of Birkiani in April triggered a protest, resulting in clashes between a group of local activists and riot police.
Georgian Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia, then the Interior Minister, met a wave of criticism for using special police forces to secure the ‘safety of construction workers’. Despite Gakharia’s vow to do so, no one was prosecuted for attacking riot police officers.
Georgian rights group the Human Rights Education and Monitoring Centre (EMC) has mounted multiple legal challenges to halt construction of Khadori3 and Samkuristskali 2. The cases are pending.
Representing local residents opposed to Khadori 3, EMC argued that Akhmeta Municipality had issued a construction permit for the dam based on an incomplete Environmental Impact Assessment report by Georgia’s Environmental Protection Ministry.
In a later report on government policies in Pankisi, EMC described the government’s infrastructural projects there as failing to involve or employ local residents. They also criticised the authorities for approaching the region only ‘from a security angle’.
Many residents of Pankisi Valley, which is populated mainly by ethnic Kists, have maintained that they never consented to the latest HHP projects in their region. However, resistance to the projects has not been unanimous and has been a source of friction among the local population.
In early November, Khaso Khangoshvili claimed that following the incident in April over Khadori 3, the government had halted planned investments in the region.
Manganese mining company Magharoeli LLC has filed lawsuits against 30 residents in the village of Shukruti, demanding that the residents pay a total of ₾5.5 million ($2.1 million), as well as restricting their property rights.
The Shukruti residents’ lawyer, Lado Kutateladze, told OC Media that they only found out about the lawsuits on Monday, adding that this latest series of cases aimed to pressure Shukruti residents to end their protest against mining operations under their village.
Demonstrators from Shukruti, who have been protesting for almost six months to raise awareness of the damage caused by manganese mining under their village, have moved their protest to Tbilisi. Police did not allow them to set up their tent in front of the parliament building.
On Wednesday evening, several dozen demonstrators arrived in Tbilisi from the village of Shukruti, west Georgia. They asked the state to pay attention to their problems and their protest.
Residents of Shukruti have bee
A Tongan activist has lashed out at Azerbaijan’s climate record ahead of the COP29 UN climate summit in Baku.
Joseph Zane Sikulu, an activist from the Pacific Basin Climate Movement made the comments in an open letter to the President of COP29, Mukhtar Babayev, a former oil executive at SOCAR.
In the letter, Sikulu introduced himself as a native Tongan, noting that Babayev recently visited the islands of Tonga to participate in the 53rd Pacific Islands Forum.
‘You visited my home island la
On Sunday, three protesters from the village of Shukruti sewed their lips shut in an attempt to attract attention to their protest against the damage manganese mining is causing to their homes. This latest action follows more than five months of continuous protest by local residents.
Sunday morning was gloomy in the protest tent. People had been gathering since the early hours, knowing that some of the protesters had made the decision to take the extreme measure of sewing their lips shut.
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