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Friday, 24 March , 2023
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The Ministry of Justice Offers Ethnic Minorities Draft Legislation and Training Courses in their Native Languages

One of the agency's priorities is increasing access to legislation and promoting legal awareness. For this purpose, the LLP Legislative Herald of Georgia ensures the placement and accessibility of the legislation translated into the languages of ethnic minorities on the website for all interested persons.

Dozens of legal acts translated into Abkhazian, Ossetian, Azerbaijani and Armenian languages are already presented on the online platform of the Legislative Herald.

The Training Center of Justice offers a training course on Georgian law to ethnic minorities, within the framework of which the population will learn the basics of Georgian law and legal terminology along with the Georgian language for free.

Deputy Minister of Justice, Tornike Cheishvili, Chairperson of the Legislative Herald, Natia Chirikashvili and Director of the Training Center of Justice, Vakhtang Zhvania chaired the meeting held at the Marneuli Public Service Hall. They also received information about other needs from the meeting participants.

Taking into account the indicated information, the Ministry of Justice will offer various projects and services to ethnic minorities in the future.

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Strasbourg Court Confirms Davit Kezerashvili’s Guilt in Embezzling Georgian Army Funds, Rejects Claims of Political Persecution

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has issued its decision in the case of Davit Kezerashvili v. Georgia. At a briefing, Justice Minister Anri Okhanashvili discussed the ruling, which upheld the verdict against Kezerashvili.

“The Court concluded that, while serving as Defense Minister shortly before the August 2008 war, Davit Kezerashvili embezzled €5,060,000 (approximately 15 million GEL at today's exchange rate) intended for the Georgian army. It also determined there was no political persecution involved in his prosecution. The Supreme Court of Georgia's verdict finding Kezerashvili guilty was deemed well-founded, and no violation of the presumption of innocence was found,” Okhanashvili stated.

Okhanashvili outlined the fraudulent activities carried out by Kezerashvili:

"During his tenure as Defense Minister, Kezerashvili unlawfully signed a fictitious agreement with an offshore company in a single day to provide combat training for the Georgian army. This agreement bypassed the General Staff of the Defense Forces. In reality, no training occurred, and the €5,060,000 allocated for the Georgian army was deliberately misappropriated."

Anri Okhanashvili emphasized that the Court also dismissed Kezerashvili’s demand for €15,000 in moral damages. Kezerashvili, who enriched himself by defrauding the Georgian army, sought additional compensation for moral damage. The Strasbourg Court firmly rejected this claim. It confirmed the seriousness of Kezerashvili’s crime and upheld the Supreme Court of Georgia's ruling as lawful.

The Justice Minister congratulated the Georgian state and armed forces on their success in the European Court and acknowledged those who defended Georgia’s interests:


“I congratulate the Georgian state, army, and people on this significant victory. I extend my gratitude to the Ministry of Justice staff and the Prosecutor’s Office for their dedicated work. We now look forward to seeing how our European partners, particularly those who previously characterized Kezerashvili as a media advocate, respond to this decision affirming his guilt,” Okhanashvili remarked.