Parliament Weekly: April 8-12

Grilling of NBG chair continues - Beselia Supreme Court bill tanks - Sexual harassment sanctions to toughen - Land ownership bill clears committees - 9 April commemorated

Parliament’s extraordinary plenary session

By decree of the President of Georgia, an extraordinary plenary session of the Parliament was held on April 8 where MPs continued hearing of President of the National Bank of Georgia (NBG), Koba Gvenetadze.

At the session, lawmakers also voted in favor of the amendments to the Law on General Education, envisaging the abolition of school graduation exams.

Committee hearings

On April 11, the Legal Issues Committee deliberated, among other issues, on the package of amendments to the Organic Law of Georgia on Common Courts with its first hearing. The package was initiated by independent MP Eka Beselia and 12 more lawmakers.

MP Eka Beselia explained that the bill aims at establishing an independent and effective justice system and improving the procedures of election of the Supreme Court judges. The committee members did not support the bill.

On April 11, the Human Rights and Civil Integration Committee deliberated, among other issues, on the ruling majority-initiated package of amendments to the Labor Code of Georgia. The bill aims at regulating the issue of sexual harassment in labor relations.

In addition, along with defining sexual harassment in public places, the bill envisages sanctions once the fact of sexual harassment is established.

On April 11, the bill on ownership of agricultural lands was discussed at a joint sitting of the Committees for Legal Issues and for Human Rights and Civil Integration. The bill was presented by MP Otar Danelia, chair of the Agrarian Issues Committee. He explained that the bill aims to establish property rights to an agricultural land with full observance of public and private interests; to promote the state policy on sustainable land management; to protect national security policy and develop local farming.

According to the initiated amendments, an agricultural land may be owned by the state, autonomous republic, municipality, legal entity of public law, Georgian citizen, legal entity of private law registered in Georgia on condition that a Georgian citizen or any above mentioned entity is a dominant partner.

According to the bill, a dominant partner shall mean a partner or group of partners of a legal entity of private law registered in Georgia, who owns over 50% of shares and/or represents the majority of partners or founders/members and has a practical possibility to decisively influence the legal entity’s decision.

Considering the remarks voiced at the hearing, the committees decided to discuss the bill at a plenary session.

The bill initiated by 32 lawmakers on amendments to the Labor Code of Georgia and to the Law on Accumulative Pension was also discussed at the same sitting. The bill was presented by one of its sponsors, MP Beka Natsvlishvili. The committee members did not support the package of amendments.

Visits

Meetings

Other events

Georgian lawmakers commemorated the tragedy of April 9, 1989, when Soviet special forces dispersed peaceful protesters on Rustaveli Avenue in Tbilisi, killing 16 on the spot and fatally wounding 4 more, who have succumbed to their injuries in the hospital.

30 years have passed since the tragic events of April 9.

Paying an official visit to Doha on April 9, Parliament Speaker Irakli Kobakhidze offered to name the chamber of plenary sessions after Zviad Gamsakhurdia, Georgia’s first President.

On April 10, a star plaque commemorating late Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania was opened in front of the Council of Europe headquarters in Strasbourg.

His famous phrase “I am Georgian, therefore I am European” are also inscribed in the star. Zhvania said these words at the PACE session after the Assembly supported Georgia’s accession to the Council of Europe.

This post is also available in: ქართული (Georgian) Русский (Russian)

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