Civil activist Mariam Kipiani was subjected to 2 days of administrative detention for standing on a pavement. The decision was delivered by Judge Davit Makaradze.
During the hearing, the representative of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Tekla Kobakhidze, stated that, during the protest, Kipiani was standing in front of Parliament with the intention of deliberately obstructing pedestrian movement. She further indicated that demonstrators had occupied the pedestrian walkway and were expressing their protest in this manner. She requested that Kipiani be found liable for an administrative offence; however, she did not specify where the protest could have been conducted, given that, under the applicable legislation, blocking a roadway is sanctioned in a similar manner.
At the hearing, the Ministry presented surveillance footage from 112, showing several individuals moving from the pavement onto the bus lane while passing near Parliament. According to the Ministry’s representative, these individuals were not participants in the protest and had to move onto the bus lane because the pavement was fully occupied.
The defence asked whether these individuals had raised any complaints, to which the Ministry’s representative responded that no communication had taken place with them. When asked on what basis it was asserted that they were not protest participants and that their movement had been obstructed, Kobakhidze stated: “I am certain.”