Explainer | Facing Resistance, Georgian Dream Rushes in Repressive Laws

The rump Georgian Dream parliament has rubber-stamped several legislative amendments to curtail dissent within the civil service and repress the mounting resistance to the GD’s usurpation of power and deviation from the European path. The amendments were made to the Criminal Code, the Administrative Offenses Code, the Law on Assemblies and Demonstrations, and the Police and Civil Service Laws. These amendments were adopted through an urgent procedure but have not yet been enacted.

They significantly increase fines for protesters, make it easier to fire civil servants, expand the scope of political appointments in civil service, expand the scope for extrajudicial detention, restrict the sale and use of pyrotechnics, and simplify new recruitment into the police force.

Below are key legislative changes – harbingers of the GD government getting ready to tighten repression.

Law on Assemblies and Demonstrations

The amendments to the Law on Assemblies and Demonstrations, adopted in the third hearing on December 13, expand the list of prohibited items during rallies while banning the covering of faces.

The restrictions follow lively protests in which demonstrators used green lasers and pyrotechnics in response to violent police dispersals, with many protesters covering their faces to protect themselves from police identification amid massive arbitrary arrests.

Administrative Offence Code

The amendments to the Administrative Offenses Code (AOC) passed in their final reading on December 13 significantly increase fines and penalties for various violations while sharply hiking fines for new restrictions under the amendments to the Law on Assemblies.

Police Law

Crackdown on the sale and use of pyrotechnics

Intensive use of fireworks in the first days of Georgian protests amid riot police dispersals and as a symbol of resistance led the Georgian Dream to introduce multi-layered restrictions on the sale, purchase, and use of pyrotechnics.

Law on Civil Service

The Law on Civil Service has been substantively amended following the multiple petitions of civil servants who spoke against the GD decision to deviate from EU accession. These changes must be read in the context of GD PM Irakli Kobakhidze and GD Secretary-General Kakha Kaladze’s references to the “self-cleansing” of civil service, as more and more civil servants issued pro-EU statements.

What Now?

The laws, most of which are scheduled to take effect in the first months of 2025, have yet to be signed by the president. It is not known whether they have been sent to President Salome Zurabishvili for signature, or whether they will await the inauguration of Mikheil Kavelashvili on December 29. Kavelashvili, who was elected president in a unanimous single-party vote, is widely seen as illegitimate.

Either way, the laws are not expected to be enacted until the final days of 2024. The amendments complete other repressive laws passed by Georgian Dream in 2024, including the Foreign Agents Law and the Anti-LGBT Law, two pieces of repressive legislation that have yet to be strictly enforced.

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