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

The woman challenging Georgia’s far-right

Samira Bayramova painted Ukrainian flags on the office of the Conservative Movement, the political offshoot of far-right and pro-Russian group Alt-Info. Photo: Tiko Davadze/Radio Marneuli.
Samira Bayramova painted Ukrainian flags on the office of the Conservative Movement, the political offshoot of far-right and pro-Russian group Alt-Info. Photo: Tiko Davadze/Radio Marneuli.

Marneuli-based human rights activist Samira Bayramova is fighting against the far-right pro-Russia Georgian group Alt-Info and its political offshoot, the Conservative Movement.

Though Samira Bayramova has long been an outspoken advocate for minority rights in Georgia, she was most recently thrust into the spotlight for taking her protest straight to the Conservative Movement’s Marneuli headquarters on 14 March.

The ethnic Azerbaijani activist spraypainted the windows of the pro-Russian party’s office with the blue and yellow bicolour of the Ukrainian flag — an act that the Conservative Movement used as grounds to file a lawsuit against Bayramova and which Alt-Info supporters cited while hurling a torrent of threats and abuse at her on social media.

‘I painted the Ukrainian flag [on their windows] to show solidarity with Ukraine and to show [them] that Russia, which they support, is doing this horrible thing in Ukraine’, Bayramova told OC Media. ‘I also wrote that they are traitors’.

‘On the day of my protest, I received a lot of support and solidarity from all over the country, but I also received threats, although I realised from the very beginning that I might be in great danger. But I just used my freedom of expression.’

Bayramova was found guilty of damaging the facade of the building and was released with a verbal reprimand.

Before the ruling, activists associated with Alt-Info also gave Bayramova an ultimatum: compensate them with ₾1,200 ($400) for damages, or they would retaliate against the United National Movement (UNM). The UNM is Georgia’s largest opposition party, with whom Bayramova is not affiliated with.

Members of Alt-Info made good on their threats two days later by spray painting the opposition group’s headquarters with red and branding it with the activist’s name alongside crudely drawn penises.

Members of Alt-Info recorded a video in front of the UNM’s office in Marneuli in which they threatened and spouted obscenities at Bayramova.

Alt-Info subsequently vandalised offices of the UNM, with which Bayramova is not associated. Photo: Jeikhun Muhamedali/Mtavari.

The activist then filed lawsuits against ‘around 10 people’ who had threatened her and her relatives with reprisals and violence. The Prosecutor’s Office granted her victim status and placed her in a special protection programme on 22 March.

The alleged perpetrators of the abuse have yet to be charged.

‘Twice they tried to hit me with a car’

Bayramova traces the tensions with Georgia’s radical groups back to January 2020, when she took the Marneuli Municipality to court in an attempt to end its funding of the local Orthodox Church as well as local Muslim organisations.

She argued that the funding should instead be diverted to vulnerable groups, including refugees and people with disabilities.

‘The bishop of the Diocese of Marneuli and Hujabi did not like my initiative. He said that I was fighting against the Georgian Church and religion’, Bayramova recalled. ‘These groups were angry with me.’

‘I am an unacceptable person to them because I demand equality, but they think that if I am an ethnic Azerbaijani, I cannot be equal to a Georgian.’

The lawsuit is still ongoing. Bayramova says that since it kicked off, she has been followed, verbally abused, and even physically attacked.

‘They were watching me and tailing me in their cars. After the pandemic started, when I got back to work, they tried to hit me twice with a car.’

‘I realised how unfair life and society are’

Bayramova found an outlet in activism at a young age as an outspoken critic of early marriage — a battle she personally had to endure. At 15, she was nearly forced into a marriage with an older man. Only through vigorous protest and sheer will did she manage to avoid it. 

‘Even though there were a lot of people against me then, I still did my best to save myself’, Bayramova recalled. ‘Then I realised how unfair life and society are’.

[Read on OC Media: Georgia’s early marriages: destinies blackened in white dresses]

By avoiding marriage, she ensured that she could pursue a higher education and qualify as a lawyer, driven to defend those who, like her, could barely defend themselves.

‘The reason why I’ve been working on these issues for almost 13 years is that, unfortunately, the rights of women and children are still not properly protected in our country.’

Bayramova’s work has taken her to many villages across Georgia’s south. She has spoken to women working the fields about their rights, and in teahouses — traditionally considered to be almost exclusively male-only spaces — she holds discussions with men, and even found eager listeners.

‘The first time I went to a teahouse, the men there were very surprised because women generally do not go inside’, she recalled. ‘At first, people weren’t very interested in their rights, but then I drew their attention to the issues.’

Ultimately, Bayramova says she is driven by one simple desire: ‘to protect the rights of any human being so that no one is oppressed and no one’s rights are violated.’

Related Articles

US Ambassador Robin Dunnigan and Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze. Official image.
Alt Info

Kobakhidze says Washington was ‘influenced’ to sanction Georgian nationals

O

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze has said that he believed US President Joe Biden’s administration was ‘influenced’ by ‘certain forces’ to impose sanctions on Georgian nationals, suggesting that American institutions needed ‘de-oligharchisation’. In a press briefing on Tuesday, Kobakhidze said that the decision to impose financial sanctions on four Georgian nationals, in addition to travel restrictions on over 60 others, was ‘frivolous and very sad’. He further suggested that the

Special Tasks Department chief Zviad (Khareba) Kharazishvili, and Alt Info founders  Konstantine Morgoshia and Zurab Makharadze.
Alt Info

US sanctions four Georgian security officials and far-right extremists for ‘serious human rights abuses’

O

Washington has imposed financial sanctions against security officials and the leaders of Alt Info for undermining and suppressing the freedom of peaceful assembly in Georgia. They have additionally imposed travel sanctions on 60 others, including senior government officials. On Monday, the US Department of Treasury sanctioned the chief of the Interior Ministry’s Special Task Department, Zviad (Khareba) Kharazishvili, and his deputy Mileri Lagazauri.  They also sanctioned the extremist far-ri

Zurab Makharadze. Photo: Mariam Nikuradze/OC Media.
2024 Georgian Parliamentary Elections

Georgia’s Alt Info to run in elections with Alliance of Patriots

O

The Georgian pro-Russian and far-right group, Alt Info, has announced they will run in the October parliamentary elections through the electoral list of the Alliance of Patriots — circumventing the authorities’ de-registering of their own political wing. Zurab Makhardze, one of Alt Info’s leaders, said they had reached an agreement with the pro-Russian and ultra-conservative Alliance of Patriots party on Monday. ‘The only chance for us to participate in the elections was [to join] a party

Several thousand people blocked the highway behind the Georgian Dream offices, after police blocked the area in front of it. Photo: Mariam Nikuradze/OC Media.
Alt Info

Georgian far-right group ‘gifted’ new political party after being de-registered

V

The Georgian far-right group Alt Info has announced they have been given control of a previously unaffiliated far-right political party, a week after the authorities de-registered their own political wing. Several thousand supporters of Alt Info gathered outside the ruling Georgian Dream party’s offices on Saturday, less than a week after their own political party, the Conservative Movement, was de-registered by Georgian authorities on a technicality.  Addressing his supporters, Alt Inf

Most Popular

Editor‘s Picks