Protests called as Georgia revives controversial ‘foreign agents’ law | Protests News

The country’s governing Georgian Dream party says the law will be passed before parliamentary elections in October.

Pro-democracy groups have called for protests after Georgia’s governing party said it will revive the controversial “foreign agents law” that mass demonstrations forced it to drop last year.

The governing Georgian Dream party said on Wednesday that it plans to make another bid to pass the legislation, which would require organisations that accept funding from abroad to register as “foreign agents”. The measure is viewed as a threat to civil society and free media.

Likened by critics – including Georgia’s pro-EU president – to laws that Russian President Vladimir Putin has used to crush dissent, the proposed bill would, if passed, require Georgian organisations receiving more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad to register or face penalties.

The announcement of the bid to revive the controversial legislation comes just more than a year after it dropped the bill under pressure from tens of thousands of protesters in Tbilisi.

Demonstrators in the capital clashed with police, who fired water cannon and tear gas at the crowds, over several days in March 2023.

The European Union, which Georgia intends to join, also denounced the law last year and warned that it would target NGOs, media organisations and individual journalists who receive foreign funding.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Georgian Dream party said that following the protests, it had changed the wording of the law.

Under the new version of the legislation, NGOs, media, and journalists would have to register as an “organisation pursuing the interests of a foreign power” instead of an “agent of foreign influence”.

“All other sections of the draft law remain unchanged,” the party said.

The head of the Georgian Dream governing bloc’s parliamentary faction, Mamuka Mdinaradze, added that opposition parties had misled the public about the legislation last year.

He highlighted that the “foreign agents” bill would be passed before parliament breaks up for general election in October.

European Path

Georgian Dream, founded by billionaire and former Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili, has been the country’s governing party since 2012.

Although it still professes ambitions of taking Georgia into the EU and NATO, in recent years, it has been accused by domestic and Western critics of authoritarian tendencies and excessive closeness to Russia.

The revival of the “foreign agents” law is likely to fuel further criticism and deep divisions in the country, and the pro-democracy groups that organised last year’s protests have been quick to announce protests against the move.

“With all the available means, we will confront yet another serious attempt to Russify Georgia,” they said in a joint statement.

President Salome Zurabishvili, who is at loggerheads with the governing party, also condemned the move, saying that it threatens to damage Georgia’s democracy.

However, she also insisted that the country will not be derailed from its European track.

“Georgia’s European path cannot be stopped … nobody can restore the past,” she said on social media. “No Russian law, nor any other destructive policy can prevent a determined nation to achieve its goal.”



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Ukraine, Poland, Georgia: Which teams have qualified for Euro 2024? | Football News

Ukraine, Poland and Georgia are the last three teams to qualify for the 24-team continental championship.

Ukraine came from behind to beat Iceland in a playoff to qualify for Euro 2024, Poland secured their place at the tournament with a penalty shootout victory over Wales and Georgia qualified for a first ever major tournament in a dramatic night for European football.

The 24-nation Euro 2024 lineup was finalised on Tuesday with three qualifying playoffs giving a stronger Eastern European flavour to the tournament that opens on June 14 in Germany.

Mykhailo Mudryk’s sweeping low shot in the 84th minute lifted Ukraine to a 2-1 victory over Iceland and a second late comeback win in the playoffs for a team representing the war-torn country.

The “home” game for Ukraine was played in neutral Poland because international games cannot be played in Kyiv for security reasons during the war against Russia, whose team has been banned from trying to qualify by UEFA.

Georgia and star forward Khvicha Kvaratskhelia will make their major tournament debut at Euro 2024 after beating Greece 4-2 in a penalty shootout. It had been a tense and testy 0-0 draw in a raucous atmosphere in Tbilisi.

The decisive penalty was scored by substitute Nika Kvekveskiri placed his perfect shot low into the corner to seal Georgia’s 4-2 win.

Wild celebrations saw thousands of Georgia fans in a 50,000 crowd at the national stadium pour onto the field and some climbed the goalposts to sit on the crossbar.

Georgian players have been European champions before – in the Soviet Union squad that won the inaugural title in 1960.

Now the independent republic has earned the right to make its own football history in Germany.

A Georgia fan with a flare on the pitch celebrates after his team qualified for Euro 2024 with a win over Greece at Boris Paichadze Dinamo Arena, Tbilisi, Georgia [Irakli Gedenidze/Reuters]

Meanwhile, Poland became the last team to book their ticket to Germany, beating Wales 5-4 in a penalty shootout in Cardiff also after a 0-0 draw.

Poland captain Robert Lewandowski, who had scored the first spot-kick of the shootout, could not bear to watch the action when his goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny pushed away the final penalty taken by Dan James.

“It’s big because I probably would have finished my international career tonight had we lost the game,” Szczesny said.

Poland have played at every Euros edition since star forward Lewandowski made his national team debut in 2008, including as co-host with Ukraine at Euro 2012.

Poland will go into a tough Group D with France, the Netherlands and Austria.

Ukraine are in Group F with Belgium, Romania and Slovakia.

Georgia go into Group F to face Cristiano Ronaldo and Portugal, Turkey and the Czech Republic.

Euro 2024 will be played in 10 German cities from June 14 to July 14.



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

‘Thrown like animals’: Georgians identify victims in Stalin’s mass graves | Human Rights

Batumi, Georgia – Natalia Kuznetsova stares tight-lipped at the abandoned house her grandfather Hasan Dishli Oglu built in the 1930s. Her father was just a toddler in 1937 when Hasan, then 33, was arrested by the Soviet secret police. He was never heard from again.

“When my father was dying, in his final days, he kept talking about my grandfather, asking why he was shot, where he was taken,” Natalia, 48, recounts. “‘I don’t know where Hasan is’, my father would say. ‘He was thrown somewhere like a dog.’”

Scorched and deserted after a recent fire, the house is a forlorn structure standing in a large plot behind the family home in a village not far from the southwestern Black Sea port city of Batumi.

For Natalia’s father, Iakob Kuznetsov, the house was a daily reminder of Hasan’s disappearance more than 80 years ago, and a symbol of intergenerational grief passed on to Natalia from his deathbed.

Hasan was among the thousands of people rounded up by the Soviet secret police and accused of being “enemies of the state” in a campaign known as the Great Terror. Under the leadership of Joseph Stalin, mass executions of innocent citizens were committed across the Soviet Union in successive waves of repression, and vast numbers of people were deported or sent to prison camps. Many families of those executed never found out what happened to their loved ones.

In Georgia, almost 15,000 people are believed to have been killed. In the absence of a committed national effort to investigate Soviet crimes and revisit official history, sociologists point to widespread amnesia, ambivalence and even denial among Georgians that such executions took place.

Since Georgia’s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, Georgian-born Stalin has achieved mythic status in the imagination of many of his compatriots. He remains a powerful and divisive figure, remembered both as a brutal dictator, and as a national hero who led the USSR to victory over Nazi Germany.

With Georgians still struggling to come to terms with their past, efforts to investigate Stalin’s Terror, and locate victims, are gathering momentum.

Forensic experts, historians and the families of those who went missing are taking it upon themselves to heal a national trauma. Through detective work and public awareness raising, they are attempting to find and identify the victims of decades-old atrocities.

Natalia Kuznetsova stands outside the family house that was built by her grandfather Hasan Dishli Oglu and that was destroyed in a fire [Iago Gogilashvili/Al Jazeera]

Boxes of bones

A musty smell emanates from a basement room at Tbilisi State Medical University. It is the smell of earth and of something else.

Inside, Meri Gonashvili from the Georgian Association of Forensic Anthropology (GAFA) is dressed in black theatre scrubs and surgical gloves.

“This is Georgia’s first forensic anthropology laboratory,” says the 35-year-old with pride.

Dozens of boxes of human bones are stacked in rows against a wall, each labelled with a unique code. They are the source of the distinctive odour.

Meri lifts a large cardboard box onto a foldaway table containing the bones of a single human skeleton.

She removes fragments of skull from a brown paper bag, and begins to carefully reassemble the pieces with adhesive tape.

The victim died from a single shot to the head, a perfect circular hole at the back of the skull marking the bullet’s entry, and a jagged cavity above the right eyebrow indicating its exit.

“We see evidence of trauma,” the forensic anthropologist states matter-of-factly. “Especially occupying the occipital region and posterior aspect of the parietals.”

For Meri, this medical lexicon helps serve as an emotional firewall against the tragedy of this person’s violent death at the hands of Soviet Georgia’s secret police.

“It is impossible for such kind of tragic events that happened to your society not to affect you mentally,” admits Meri. “But you should bury this kind of emotional things with your mind and just keep working.”

From another box Meri pulls out a series of artefacts found at gravesites.

“This shoe is very common,” she says, turning a flattened galosh over in her hands, “and underneath is printed the stamp USSR in Cyrillic, and a number, 37. This could be the year of manufacture. Not the shoe size.”

Meri Gonashvili holds up a galosh recovered from a mass grave in southwestern Georgia [Iago Gogilashvili/Al Jazeera]

‘We do it for the families’

In what became known as the Great Terror or Purge, Stalin authorised the arrests of anyone suspected of plotting against him, following the assassination of senior Bolshevik leader Sergei Kirov in 1936. Coordinated by the secret police, the NKVD (People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs), what began with the targeting of high-ranking party officials quickly expanded to rounding up ordinary citizens.

In the late 1930s, anyone suspected of counter-revolutionary thoughts or activities was targeted, from educated and respected village elders to clergy, writers, workers and peasants. Between 1937 and 1938, the NKVD executed an estimated 700,000 to 1.2 million Soviet citizens.

GAFA’s laboratory contains the first victims to have been exhumed in Georgia – the skeletal remains of approximately 150 people – from a series of mass graves at a military base close to Batumi in the autonomous Adjara region.

Meri is facing a task that could last a lifetime: Locating and identifying the thousands of  Georgians tried and shot during this period.

“Everybody just talks about DNA, DNA, but before DNA, we need laboratory work and forensic anthropological analysis,” she cautions. “If you incorrectly assemble one individual then you can send the wrong sample to the DNA lab.”

Then, her composure breaks, and her voice trembles. “We do it for the families,” she says. “We owe it to these people, to the victims, to do everything in our capacity to return them back to their families.”

Muslim victims

In 2019, the Georgian Orthodox Church announced it had completed excavations of the first of Stalin’s victims in the country at a site locals had suspected was an execution ground.

It said 150 bodies had been exhumed since 2017 from four mass graves at a former Soviet military base in Khelvachauri and that the remains would soon be reburied. Not a single individual had been identified.

Academics and researchers working on Soviet repression regretted that forensic experts and historians had not been involved.

Reburial “would leave many questions unanswered,” civil society organisation the Institute for Development of Freedom of Information (IDFI) said at the time.

IDFI had compiled a list of 1,050 individuals executed in Adjara from surviving Soviet documents and hoped it might be possible to trace descendants and reunite families with the remains.

Meanwhile, Muslim leaders objected to the Orthodox Church’s unilateral involvement. The Supreme Religious Administration of Muslims of All Georgia was wary of a mass Christian reburial when many of the Adjara victims were known to have been Muslim. In the 1930s, Adjara had a large Muslim population and the Soviet authorities were known to target religious and ethnic minorities.

Facing pressure, the Church halted its reburial plans, and the Adjaran government set up a special commission under its health ministry to study the issue.

“I just called to offer my help,” explains Meri, who had seen media reports about the discovery.

“I went there and I saw the situation. These skeletal human remains had been exhumed and stored in the basement of a church,” she recalls. “It appeared no specialist had been involved there, no proper methodology was being used.”

Together with GAFA, experts from the American Academy of Forensic Sciences were invited to participate in the excavation of a fifth mass grave at the same military base in August 2021.

Twenty-eight bodies were found with their hands tied behind their backs and gunshot wounds to their heads.

“When you open and excavate the gravesite, the bodies, how they are organised – they tell the stories by themselves,” says Meri, a hint of anger in her calm voice. “They were thrown [there] like animals, not human beings.”

Later, in February 2022, IDFI, collaborating with the Georgian Orthodox Church, announced the results of a parallel investigation – the recovery of 29 bodies from a sixth mass grave at the same site. This time, the excavation was carried out by Polish experts and the unearthed bodies also showed the same signs of execution.

Two separate investigations are now under way, led by separate organisations, dependent on the support and resources of different international partners.

Excavations at a former military base in Khelvachauri in southwestern Georgia have uncovered six mass graves. At this site, Grave 6, 29 skeletons were discovered including one belonging to a woman [Courtesy of IDFI]

Carrying a burden for decades

Locals whose relatives disappeared during the 1930s were invited to visit GAFA’s work. Staring into the pit at Grave 5, Zura Zakharaidze wept. He hoped that the mass grave would reveal its secrets, and relieve his family of a burden it had been carrying for decades.

“My great-grandfather Kedem Agha was a philanthropist. He built the first Georgian school in my village. Unfortunately, such a man as he was arrested and shot in 1937.”

Back at his home in the picturesque Adjaristsqali valley, Zura, 57, brings out sepia and black-and-white photographs of three men dressed in 1930s attire.

One photograph shows Kedem, Zura’s great-grandfather, a bearded man in his 40s, wearing a sheepskin hat.

Another shows Zura’s grandfather, Ismail, together with his brother Suleiman, both in their 20s, sporting clipped moustaches. Ismail wears a suit and bow tie. Suleiman is dressed in a military coat and a peaked cap.

In a story that has been passed down in his family, witnesses recalled his grandfather attending a local village council after Kedem and Suleiman were arrested.

“‘If my father and brother are enemies, then I am also an enemy,’ my grandfather said,” Zura explains. “And from that day, my grandfather, Ismail, disappeared.”

All three of Zura’s relatives are on IDFI’s aggregated list of executions, but Zura’s DNA has not been linked to any of the remains recovered so far.

“Our great-grandmother, my father’s grandmother, Aishe Tavdgeridze, suffered so much,” Zura says. “Tears in her eyes were not drying, our family endured such a great tragedy and this pain follows all of us to this day.”

Zura’s determination to find his missing ancestors extends to helping others in the same plight. His Adjara Memorial foundation, established by his father in 1997, coordinates with the Adjaran commission to locate victims’ families or connect families to the commission.

“DNA analysis of all found remains should be done and the search for other repressed people should continue,” he says resolutely.

Zura Zakharaidze sits with his mother Svetlana, who holds a photo of her late husband, the founder of the Adjara Memorial foundation for families of victims of Stalin’s Great Terror [Iago Gogilashvili/Al Jazeera]

Analysing the remains

Slowly, the skeletons are yielding their dark secrets.

“The NKVD documented their crime,” says Meri. “I have 28 execution documents of individuals who were executed on December 27, 1937.”

Meri’s team suspected that the documents might belong to the victims her team excavated from Grave 5. That hypothesis proved correct.

Collaborating with a genetics laboratory from Poland, three individuals were identified. Their bone samples matched the DNA of some of the surviving family members of the named victims tracked down by a Georgian television producer working on a documentary about the project.

But progress has faltered.

The method they used to cross-reference DNA, though relatively inexpensive, has limitations and was unable to establish a definitive link between the other remains and reference samples from living descendants.

“We need more families to be involved, and it’s difficult to establish a positive match as we are now dealing with second or third generations, grandchildren and great-grandchildren,” Meri explains.

A different DNA sequencing technology that is better at determining more distant relationships could solve that problem. To date, their Polish partners have covered the costs, but the alternative technology is up to five times more expensive to operate.

Meanwhile, an investigation to identify the victims of Grave 6 has stalled. IDFI’s team has not been able to finance DNA analysis of any of the 29 skeletal remains uncovered there.

Anton Vacharadze, head of memory and disinformation studies at IDFI, says it is “particularly regrettable,” given that forensic analysis has revealed a female individual among the skeletal remains.

IDFI has an official list of 29 individuals executed on March 15, 1938 from Georgia’s Ministry of Internal Affairs archive. Among them is a female. Given that just 11 women are believed to have been executed in Adjara during that period, a match between the 29 victims and the document from the archive seems likely.

“DNA analysis for 29 remains will cost more than $20,000 – impossible for a nongovernmental organisation, and the state does not finance this process,” Vacharadze says.

Then there is the issue of outreach. Although IDFI researchers have identified a total of 1,050 executed individuals in Adjara, there is no centralised contact database of living descendants, and no coordinated communication strategy to invite more people to come forward for DNA analysis.

Progress at Grave 5 and 6 to identify remains has been slow. Meri’s team has identified three of the 28 victims recovered from Grave 5 so far [Iago Gogilashvili/Al Jazeera]

Hasan: the man with the leather boots

A portrait of Natalia’s grandfather Hasan, possibly when he was in his 20s, stands on a side table in the living room of the Kuznetsova family home. He looks boyish and wears a military-style tunic and knee-high riding boots. He strikes a slightly awkward pose, his hands on his hips, and his thumbs inserted behind his waist belt. It is the only picture of him they have.

Natalia and her mother, Eteri Kuznetsova, 69, sit at the dining room table.

“My husband Iakob was just two years old when Hasan was taken away,” Eteri sighs. “This is how he always remembered his father, by the leather boots he was wearing.”

Meri took DNA reference samples from the family in 2022. When the lab results came through, Hasan was among the victims found at Grave 5.

In June 2023, Eteri and Natalia met with the Adjaran special commission.

A court had approved a death certificate for the family, and the commission concluded that there were no further grounds for withholding his body.

The women emerged from the meeting triumphant. Hasan’s remains had been lying for almost three years in a cardboard box under GAFA’s supervision at BAU International University Batumi.

For Eteri, however, there was one lingering regret: That her husband Iakob, who died in 2020, would not be there to see his father return home.

Back at the family home, Natalia finds a copy of Hasan’s execution document taken from the state archive. She runs a finger across the faded Cyrillic print.

“Dishli Oglu, Hasan Yakubovich. Shot. But who were the ones who signed the execution order?” she asks, pointing to the signatures of three Soviet officials, known as a troika, who together could decide whether a person lived, or died.

Nika Kuznetsov, Hasan’s great-grandson, holds the only photo that the family has of Hasan [Keti Khuskivadze/Al Jazeeera]

Stalin’s ghost

Under Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev’s policy of de-Stalinisation, families of many of the victims were issued letters during the 1950s and 1960s, posthumously overturning their relatives’ convictions.

And that, for many, is where the story officially ended.

When the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, an independent Georgia re-emerged. But there was to be no truth and reconciliation programme unlike in other post-Soviet bloc countries such as Poland, the former East Germany, Romania and the Baltic states.

Vacharadze of IDFI says civil society organisations are determined to shine a light onto this dark chapter in Georgian history where families lost loved ones through executions and forced exile. But, he says, there is little appetite for a public inquiry into Soviet-era repression. “A significant portion of society views our earnest efforts and advocacy as a waste of time,” he explains.

Poverty and unemployment remain serious challenges in Georgia. And, mindful of the country’s troubled history under Russian and later Soviet imperialism, Georgian society remains fearful about a return to conflict, especially given Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“They argue that society faces much larger problems than events from 85 years ago,” Vacharadze says.

Successive Georgian governments have also shown a reluctance to back research.

“The state says, ‘It happened, we know, so let’s move forward and focus on our victories and something glorious, not traumatic,’” he explains. “And there are still people influencing our everyday life from that period, politicians who are descended from Communist Party members. … They simply don’t want to reveal past crimes committed by their [ancestors].”

He adds: “It’s an endless cycle of power exercised by families who were active both then and now.”

Today a battleground over Stalin and the wider Soviet legacy persists. There are limits on what is taught in the education system, and a leading institute on Georgia’s Soviet legacy, SovLab, has accused the government of increasingly restricting access to the state archives.

SovLab and others emphasise that the weaponisation of history in Russia under current President Vladimir Putin has sought to rehabilitate Stalin, and the Kremlin’s disinformation campaigns have had a significant influence on the public discourse in Georgia, amplified by Georgia’s own political elite. Given the absence of informed, public debate, Soviet-era state crimes are poorly understood, even denied, says Tinatin Japaridze, author of the 2022 book Stalin’s Millennials.

Polls continue to show that many Georgians still hold Stalin in high regard, especially for having been the most powerful leader to have emerged from the country.

In her book, Japaridze argues that Stalin remains at the core of a post-Soviet identity crisis in Georgia where his “omnipresent ghost” haunts a divided society. She also draws from her own family’s experience of repression. Japaridze’s great-aunt Nina Chichua-Bedia and her husband Erik Bedia were both executed. But Bedia was editor in chief of the Komunisti newspaper and as a propagandist complicit in supporting the regime.

“We, as a family, were not just victims. We were participating somewhat in these processes,” she explains. “We as a country need to accept responsibility, to a degree, for everything that transpired.

“The victims that died as a result of these purges and repressions were not just the victims of Joseph Stalin. There were those who stood on the sidelines and stayed quiet.”

And when it comes to investigating the mass graves, authorities seem more focused on reburial rather than identifying and excavating more gravesites.

“We won’t wait long,” says Nino Nizharadze, Adjara’s health minister, who heads the special commission. “The first 150 remains are still in the examination phase.

“Once the DNA samples have been processed and stored for further research – the topic of their burial will be discussed.”

Eteri Kuznetsova (left) regrets that her husband Iakob, who died in 2020, would not be able to see his father’s remains return home [Keti Khuskivadze/Al Jazeera]

Dacha of death

Meri stands before a line of barbed wire at the Khelvachauri military base. Just beyond lies a decaying Soviet housing block for the garrison once stationed there.

In front, an observation tower leans sideways, the twisted frame suggesting imminent collapse. This was a site of mass murder.

“It’s not only this area where we have the gravesites,” Meri says. “There are much more, many more in Georgia. Fifteen thousand people are missing and they need to be found.”

Gravesites are known to exist elsewhere in the country including the capital Tbilisi, but only their approximate locations are known.

One mass grave is rumoured to lie on the grounds of a luxurious country home built to house the main regional office of the Soviet leadership.

The building, with its colonnade, terraces and balconies, is a palatial mix of European, Soviet neoclassical and Georgian architecture.

It is perched on a steep hill in the thickly forested Adjaran countryside.

Akhmed Mekeidze, 67, peers through the iron entrance gate leading to what is locally known as Beria’s dacha, after Lavrentiy Beria, a senior Communist Party leader who became head of the NKVD in 1938. Beria oversaw the political purges in Georgia during the Terror.

The dacha where a mass grave is rumoured to lie [Iago Gogilashvili/Al Jazeera]

Today, the dacha is privately owned, and closed to the public.

Akhmed’s cropped hair has turned silver, but his moustache is still tinted with the auburn colour of his youth.

“There is talk that this was a slaughterhouse. All the prisoners used to be brought here and distributed from here or killed here,” Akhmed explains. “I remember my grandfather’s brothers saying for a long time there was a terrible smell coming from this area, probably people were not buried properly.”

Though he was not born until 20 years after his grandfather’s disappearance in 1936, Akhmed says he remembers as a child how his grandmother used to cry all the time.

“I made a childhood promise to her that I would bring my grandfather back,” he says.

Akhmed worked as a farm labourer and used to make a little money on the side reselling goods, a practice that was illegal at the time. As soon as he earned enough money, he would spend it on travel to penal colonies in far-flung corners of the Soviet empire in search of his grandfather Akhmed, hoping that his namesake had been deported and not executed.

But in 2019, he discovered his grandfather’s name was the 51st entry on the IDFI’s list of Adjaran victims. In 2023, he provided a DNA test. He is still waiting for an answer.

Akhmed studiously ignores the fierce-looking mountain dog barking ferociously from behind the gate. Though he hopes the dacha might hold the secret to his grandfather’s disappearance, he acknowledges the remains could be anywhere.

“I have sent letters to the president, the prime minister, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, demanding research and opening of graves. Everyone is writing to me sincerely, they tell me to wait – and I am waiting,” he says.

Had his grandmother, who died in the 1980s, lived to see her husband’s remains returned, she would have found peace, he believes.

Perhaps someday the owners will allow experts to investigate the dacha. Until then, Akhmed has a space reserved for his grandfather beside his grandmother in the family plot at the local cemetery.

“As long as I live,” Akhmed says, “I will try to fulfil that request and bury him along with his wife, his mother and his two children.”

Members of the local Muslim community gather for Hasan’s funeral and burial. Valery Kuznetsov, Hasan’s grandson and Natalia’s brother, is on the far left [Keti Khuskivadze/Al Jazeeera]

A funeral

Given the present lack of funding and a prevailing political indifference, the rest of Stalin’s victims in Georgia may never be found, let alone identified.

For this reason, Zura hopes that a large tomb will be funded by the local government and erected on the military base and that it can serve as a “holy place”.

“We still do not know where our ancestors lie, but we want that place to be where we can honour their memory,” he explains.

The families Meri is in regular contact with have one wish. “They want their loved ones home,” she says.

On a hot, humid weekend last June, Meri travelled to Batumi to help Natalia and Eteri prepare Hasan’s remains for burial.

Family, friends and members of the local Muslim community gathered in the backyard of their home.

Since Georgia’s independence, many Adjarans have converted to Orthodox Christianity, including Natalia and her brother Valery. But in accordance with Hasan’s faith, the family gave him a Muslim funeral.

Meri and Natalia unpack Hasan’s bones from the box, and place them onto a white funeral shroud. Meri carefully reassembles his skeleton in the sunshine.

The ruin of Hasan’s house offers shade to Eteri, dressed in a black dress and headscarf, who sits quietly while the imam intones a Quranic prayer.

Akhmed and Zura come to pay their respects. The discovery of Adjara’s mass graves has moulded the families of Stalin’s victims into something of a community.

Alongside the roaring traffic, the pallbearers walk the casket solemnly along the main road to a nearby cemetery.

Hasan’s portrait leans against his son Iakob’s tombstone as the coffin is lowered into an adjacent grave.

Eteri strokes her husband’s image, etched into the black granite. “What precious children Hasan left us,” Eteri sobs, “and what a precious family you left me.”

“I have bittersweet feelings, as if I was burying the missing relatives of my own family,” says Zura. “But we have begun to hope.”

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

I dig up skeletons of Stalin’s victims to give families closure | Close Up | Crimes Against Humanity

“When you open a gravesite, the bodies, how they are organised, they tell the stories by themselves… they can tell us about how they disappeared, how they were killed,” says forensic anthropologist Meri Gonashvili.

Gonashvili is a woman on a mission. Through detective-like work, the young Georgian anthropologist at Tbilisi State Medical University is hoping to identify victims executed by the Soviet secret police during the Reign of Terror, also known as the Great Purge of 1936-1938. The totalitarian campaign led by Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin targeted anyone accused of plotting against the state. Many ordinary citizens were exiled, imprisoned or executed.At least 700,000 are estimated to have been executed throughout the USSR including some 15,000  in Soviet Georgia. “For this regime, human life didn’t have any value,” says Meri as she reconstructs the skeleton of a victim shot in the head.

Most families never knew what happened to their loved ones. But now, six mass graves containing the remains of people executed during Stalin’s Reign of Terror have been discovered in western Georgia. The families of the missing have teamed up with Gonashvili and other experts to find and identify the victims of Stalin’s ruthless operation.

Will Meri be able to identify some of the victims who disappeared during Stalin’s Great Purge and reunite their remains with their living relatives? Watch Georgia’s Missing People by Robin Forestier-Walker to find out.

Credits

A film by: Robin Forestier-Walker

Producer: Nino Shonia

Cinematographer: Iago Gogilashvili

Editors: Robin Forestier-Walker, Antonia Perello

Sound Editor & Mixer: Linus Bergman

Senior Editor: Donald Cameron

Executive Producer: Tierney Bonini

Special Thanks: Special Thanks: Rustavi 2, IDFI & SovLab

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Fani Willis, accused of affair with Trump prosecutor, vowed to not date staff in 2020

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who is accused of having a clandestine relationship with the special prosecutor she hired to bring charges against former President Donald Trump in his Georgia election interference case, promised in a 2020 interview that she would not sleep with her staffers.

Willis is under fire for allegedly having a secret relationship with Nathan Wade, whom she appointed as a special prosecutor in the high-profile case in November 2021 for a hefty salary — a day before he filed for divorce from his wife.

“I will certainly not be choosing to date people that work under me,” Willis said during an April 2020 appearance on “The Patricia Crayton Show” while campaigning for district attorney.

“We are at a place in society where things happen in people’s relationships — husbands and wives sometimes, there are outside relationships. I don’t think that that’s what the community is concerned about. Although there might be a moral breaking in that,” she continued.

“I think that what citizens are really, really concerned about is if you chose to have inappropriate contact with employees,” she continued.

“There’s nothing I can say on it other than that it is distracting, it is certainly inappropriate for the No. 1 law officer in this state, and it really really saddens me,” she said.

Willis added it would be “very unfortunate if the taxpayers of this community have to pay for any of those lawsuits.”

Fani Willis said in 2020 that she would not have a relationship with her staffers. Fani Willis/Facebook
Willis hired Wade as a special prosecutor in Donald Trump’s Georgia election interference case. Getty Images

Willis and Wade were first accused of having an “improper” relationship in a motion filed last week by Michael Roman, one of Trump’s 18 co-defendants in Willis’ Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act probe.

Roman’s filing accused Wade — a private attorney with Atlanta-based Wade & Campbell — of using some of the nearly $654,000 in legal fees he was paid by the DA’s Office to take Willis on lavish trips. 

He argued the criminal charges should be dismissed against him as Willis “violated laws regulating the use of public monies, suffer from irreparable conflicts of interest, and have violated their oaths of office under the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct.”

Willis and Wade allegedly had a secret relationship. Wade & Campbell Firm
Fani Willis and Nathan Wade, right, allegedly took lavish trips together, his ex-wife alleges. Getty Images

Willis is also accused of hiring Wade despite him not being properly qualified or experienced in handling criminal matters.

Wade’s ex-wife, Joycelyn Wade, alleged in a filing with the Cobb County Superior Court on Friday that he tried to have their divorce records sealed immediately after he was hired by Willis’ office to keep the breakup under wraps.

She alleged that her former husband never told her that he was working for Willis on the Trump case — or the exorbitant amount of money he was making from the gig. She said he was left with “little means of financial support” while joining the DA on trips to California, Florida and the Caribbean.

On Thursday, attorneys for Willis filed a motion to get her out of sitting for a Jan. 23 deposition in the Wade divorce case, claiming she wouldn’t be able to offer relevant testimony since their marriage essentially ended in 2017, when Jocylyn allegedly cheated on Nathan.

Jocylyn’s legal team responded by saying that Willis’ assertion of the affair was false, and argued that she “was experiencing a profound sense of disconnection in her marriage” due to earlier incidents of infidelity by Nathan Wade.

Sources told The Post the pair had been working together since at least 2019.

The Fulton County Board of Commissioners also said Friday it had launched a probe into whether Willis misused county funds and “accepted valuable gifts and personal benefits” from Wade. The Atlanta DA has until Feb. 2 to respond.

Wade, meanwhile, was back in court today for a hearing on the Georgia election interference case.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Ex-wife says Georgia prosecutor filed for divorce a day after being hired by Fani Willis as affair rumors swirl

Nathan Wade’s ex-wife claims he filed to divorce her just one day after he was hired by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis – his alleged paramour – to be lead prosecutor in the Georgia election fraud case against former President Donald Trump, according to court documents filed Friday. 

Wade then immediately moved to have records related to the breakup sealed by the court handling the proceedings, Joycelyn Wade alleged in a 19-page filing with the Cobb County Superior Court.

“Plaintiff [Nathan Wade] was appointed as a special prosecutor by Ms. Willis on November 1, 2021. Plaintiff filed for divorce on November 2, 2021. Defendant [Joycelyn Wade] was served by process server on November 3, 2021,” the document submitted by attorney Andrea Dyer Hastings states.  

“Before Defendant even filed her Answer and Counterclaim, Plaintiff filed a motion asking the court to seal the record in this divorce action,” the filing continues. 

Nathan Wade filed for divorce one day after he was hired by the Fulton County DA, according to court filings. Getty Images
Willis claims the Wades marriage was over before she even met Nathan. via REUTERS

Nathan Wade and Willis have been accused by Trump co-defendant Michael Roman of having an “improper” and “clandestine” relationship that Roman argues is grounds for having criminal charges against him dismissed. 

Roman’s bombshell filing accused Nathan Wade — a private attorney with Atlanta-based Wade & Campbell — of using some of the nearly $654,000 in legal fees he’s raked in from the Fulton County DA’s Office for his work on the Trump case to take Willis on lavish trips. 

Willis is also accused of hiring Wade to help prosecute the Trump case despite him not being properly qualified or experienced in handling criminal matters.

Joycelyn claims she was left with “little means of financial support” after Nathan divorced her and allegedly paid for lavish trips with Willis. @purevinesfreshwines

Joycelyn Wade claimed Friday that her now-former husband never told her he was working for Willis on the Trump case, or how much money he was making as a result of the appointment, and left her with “little means of financial support” while he shelled out on trips to “California, Florida and the Caribbean” with Willis. 

The filing includes bank records detailing Nathan Wade’s travel expenses, including spends of over $800 at the Doubletree Napa Valley American Canyon hotel in May of last year and $3,172.20 on Norwegian Cruise Line the previous November — as well as $370.88 at the Hyatt Regency Aruba around the same time.

Joycelyn’s filing comes one day after attorneys for Willis filed a motion to get the Atlanta DA out of sitting for a Jan. 23 deposition in the Wade divorce case.

Willis’ legal team argued that the subpoena should be dismissed, since she wouldn’t be able to offer relevant testimony, and claimed that the Wades’ marriage was already over by 2017 — before Willis met Nathan – when Joycelyn allegedly cheated on him. 

Hastings responded that Willis’ claim of a full-blown affair by Joycelyn was “false,” arguing that her client “was experiencing a profound sense of disconnection in her marriage” after prior infidelity by Nathan Wade.

Joycelyn Wade “regrettably reconnected with an old friend through social media and text messages were the sole extent of their contact,” wrote Hastings, who argued that her client never met in person with the former flame and the couple “successfully worked through this issue, as evidenced by the fact that it was not until four (4) years later that [Nathan] filed for divorce.”

The DA’s allegations, Hastings added, “[raise] the question of whether Ms. Wills possesses equal intimate knowledge of any marital discord involving any other of her special prosecutors.”

“Her public inquiry of ‘why the one’ seems to be met with a response that suggests, ‘because you, Ms. Wills, are having an affair with him and not them.’”

Meanwhile, the Fulton County Board of Commissioners announced Friday that it was investigating whether Willis misused county funds and “accepted valuable gifts and personal benefits” from Nathan Wade, giving the Atlanta DA until Feb. 2 to respond.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Los Angeles signs LB Tae Crowder

The Chargers signed linebacker Tae Crowder on Tuesday,

In correspondence, Los Angeles waived offensive tackle Andrew Trainer with an injury designation.

Buy Chargers Tickets

Crowder was the No. 255 overall pick by the Giants in 2020, making him “Mr. Irrelevant.” He appeared in 41 games, 31 being starts, before being waived in December of 2022. Crowder then joined the Steelers’ practice squad but did not appear in any games.

Through three seasons, Crowder has 232 tackles, nine for loss, eight passes defended, two sacks, two forced fumbles and a pair of interceptions.

Before joining the NFL ranks, Crowder was a key player for the Georgia Bulldogs, finishing 122 career tackles, five pass breakups and two interceptions.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Georgia hero cop Alexis Callaway saves choking baby: bodycam

A Georgia cop is being applauded for her heroic efforts in saving a choking baby from dying.

Dramatic body cam footage shows Senoia Police Officer Alexis Callaway spring into action when a four-week-old baby suddenly began to choke.

“No hesitation. I saw the baby. Saw that it was the grandmother that had the baby,” Callaway told FOX 5 Atlanta. “I took it. Made myself at home and started going.”

The cop, who joined Senoia police in 2020, rushed into the child’s home and snapped up the baby before administering first aid.

“I’ve been certified since the age of 16 and working with kids and stuff like that,” Callaway told the outlet.

After performing first aid, which included repeatedly patting the baby’s back and turning him, bodycam footage showed the child successfully spit out the obstructing liquid and begin to breathe normally.


Officer Alexis Callaway hurries to the scene and runs into the home where the infant was choking.
Senoia Police Department

“It is supposed to release anything that could be obstructing the airway,” Callaway said of the life-saving technique. “And you are supposed to have them angled kind of downward to help get them lodged out.”

Callaway’s act of bravery did not go unnoticed. She will be receiving the Senoia Police Department’s lifesaving award in a ceremony next month.

“It’s rewarding, I think he was one month old, now gets the rest of his life,” she added.


Officer Alexis Callaway administers the lifesaving technique on the choking infant, as family members nervously watch.
Senoia Police Department

The officer urged others to learn the basics of CPR and first aid in case they, too, could one day save a life.

“Prevent what could have been a disastrous outcome in that even during that time of mayhem, she brought just a sense of calm to that entire incident,” Senoia Police Department’s Captain Jason Ercole said of Callaway’s actions.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Black voters in Georgia overwhelmingly reported positive voting experience under controversial law

The overwhelming majority of black voters in Georgia said they had a “good” or “excellent” voting experience under a new election reform law that President Biden decried as “Jim Crow 2.0” when it was enacted in 2021.

A post-election survey from the University of Georgia released last week found that none of the 364 black voters polled had a “poor” experience at the ballot box.

By contrast, 72.6% of the surveyed black voters said their experience was “excellent,” while 23.6% said it was “good” and 3.3% said it was “fair.” The remaining 0.5% said they didn’t know how to characterize their voting experience.

In addition, 99.4% of black voters said they felt safe while waiting to cast their ballot.

In March of 2021, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed a GOP-led bill into law that imposed restrictions on voting by mail and identification requirements while increasing legislative control over elections in the state.


None of the black voters polled said they had a poor voting experience.
Getty Images

Critics said the Election Integrity Act was an attempt to further marginalize historically suppressed black voters in the state — and an overreaction to former President Donald Trump’s claims that widespread voter fraud in the usually red state led to his defeat there in the 2020 election.

“This is Jim Crow in the 21st Century. It must end,” President Biden said of the measure at the time it became law.

“Instead of celebrating the rights of all Georgians to vote or winning campaigns on the merits of their ideas, Republicans in the state instead rushed through an un-American law to deny people the right to vote,” he said.

The passage of the bill led Major League Baseball to yank the 2021 All Star Game from Truist Park in Cobb County, Ga. as Democrats called for a boycott of the state economy.


Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, signed the 2021 law into effect amid Democratic opposition.
AP

The 2022 election in Georgia featured a key Senate race between two black candidates. Sen. Raphael Warnock, a Democrat, beat back a challenge from University of Georgia Heisman Trophy winner and Trump-anointed GOP hopeful Herschel Walker in a Dec. 6 runoff.

In contrast to Biden’s claims, 91.6% of black voters said voting in 2022 was either easier or had the same degree of difficulty as in 2020 — with only 6.9% saying casting a ballot was easier two years earlier.

The university surveyed 1,253 voters over the phone between Nov. 13 and Dec. 6.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Antonio Brown, suspect in murder of Atlanta grandmother, allegedly stole vodka before home break-in

The man accused of stabbing a 77-year-old woman to death inside her Atlanta home was reportedly intoxicated and stole a bottle of vodka from a liquor store before the killing.

Antonio Brown, 23, allegedly walked out of a nearby package store with a bottle of vodka before hopping the fence into the affluent gated community in Buckhead where police say he slaughtered Eleanor Bowles in a botched carjacking Saturday.

Brown tried to buy a $20 bottle of Absolut Vodka from Buckhead’s Best Wine & Spirits around 11:30 a.m., but was turned away because “he was already intoxicated,” according to a police report obtained by The Post.

A store employee told police that he then “snatched” the bottle and walked out of the store on Northside Parkway NW. She said staffers tried to stop him, but he was acting “aggressive.”

The employee said Brown was known by locals and was “always under the influence.” She said she and others believed he was homeless, according to the report.

Antonio Brown was arrested Monday and charged with murder, aggravated battery, possession of a knife, elder abuse and hijacking a motor vehicle.
Fulton County Sheriff’s Office
Brown was arrested on a lengthy list of charges, including murder and elder abuse.
ATLANTA POLICE DEPT

About a half hour after the shoplifting, Brown entered the community where Bowles lived, broke into her home and allegedly stabbed the grandmother multiple times in the garage, officials said.

Brown was trying to steal Bowles’ 2021 Lexus RS350 when she interrupted, police believe.

He is accused of stabbing her to death and taking off in the car, which was recovered later that night.

Bowles’ lifeless body was found in her garage by her son several hours later around 5:30 p.m., police said.

He was coming to visit his mother for the holidays when he made the heartbreaking discovery.

Eleanor Bowles, 77, was found hours after the slaying by her son.
gofundme

“I was on my way to visit her for the holidays and got to her a few hours too late,” Michael Bowles told FOX 5. “Finding her like that is something that will be with me forever. What happened to her was her worst nightmare. It’s most people’s worst nightmare.”

Brown was arrested Monday and charged with murder, aggravated battery, possession of a knife, elder abuse and hijacking a motor vehicle. He was booked into Fulton County jail.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version