South Ossetia has handed over the body of Archil Tatunashvili, a former Georgian soldier who died in prison in South Ossetia ‘in unclear circumstances’, to the Georgian authorities, 26 days after his death.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which acts as a neutral intermediary, transferred the mortal remains of Tatunashvili on Tuesday night.
The body has already been handed over to Tatunashvili’s family, after a forensic examination in the National Forensics Bureau in Tbilisi.
Georgia’s State Minister for Reconciliation Ketevan Tsikhelashvili said that ‘although the forensic examination was conducted, it has not been yet been completed’. According to her, more time is required ‘to get qualified results’.
Tsikhelashvili and other officials have refused to say whether there were signs of violence on Tatunashvili’s body.
Georgia’s Ministry of Internal Affairs has launched an investigation into Tatunashvili’s death.
South Ossetian authorities had repeatedly refused to release Tatunashvili’s body ‘until a forensic examination was complete’. They said that tissue samples had been sent to Moscow for analysis, while the body remained in Tskhinvali.
The EU Monitoring Mission (EUMM) welcomed the handover of Tatunashvili’s body and promised to ‘follow developments closely’ in its monitoring capacity and in line with its Mandate.
Tatunashvili, 35, was detained in Akhalgori (Leningor) on 22 February, along with two other Georgian citizens, Levan Kutashvili and Ioseb Pavliashvili. The latter two were released from custody soon after but were ordered to remain in South Ossetia until the investigation into Tatunashvili’s death was complete. They were released to Tbilisi-administered territory on 11 March.
Tatunashvili died in Tskhinvali later the night of his detention. According to the South Ossetian security services, he died after falling from the stairs while trying to escape. They also accused him of being a Georgian informant, and ‘participating in Georgian aggression in 2004–2008’. They later linked him to a homemade bomb they say they found in Akhalgori.
For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.
A Georgian citizen has died in detention in Abkhazia’s eastern Gali District after being arrested for ‘illegally crossing the border’. According to Abkhazian officials, 29-year-old Irakli Kvaratskhelia hanged himself at a Russian border service unit where he was taken to file documents.
Georgian officials have said Kvaratskhelia may have been beaten in the detention facility. Georgia’s Samkharauli National Forensics Bureau, which is examining his body, has so far found no evidence of such v
Georgia has filed a case against Russia at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) for ‘wide-scale practices of harassment, detention, assault and murder on the Russian-occupied territories of Georgia’. While Georgia argued that such practices had ‘intensified since the 2008 war’ reaching a ‘critical point’ with the February killing of Archil Tatunashvili, South Ossetian officials dismissed the move as ‘an absurd propaganda action’.
On Wednesday, Georgia’s Justice Ministry issued a statem
The Russian and South Ossetian authorities have slammed Georgia for passing the Otkhozoria–Tatunashvili sanctions list into law. On 2 July, authorities in South Ossetia labelled the list ‘cynical’ and ‘irresponsible’, dubbing it ‘another indicator’ of Tbilisi’s ‘lack of desire to face its own mistakes and normalise relations’ with Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
The list includes those accused or convicted in absentia for ‘the murder, kidnapping, torture, and inhumane treatment’ of Georgian cit
Georgia released the first 33 names on the ‘Otkhozoria-Tatunashvili list’ of sanctioned individuals on Tuesday. The list includes those accused or convicted in absentia for ‘the murder, kidnapping, torture, and inhumane treatment’ of Georgian citizens in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and for the cover-up of these crimes, since 1991.
At its first meeting since parliamentary approval on 20 June, the cabinet led by new Prime Minister Mamuka Bakhtadze identified the justice and foreign ministries