Europe | How to beat protesters

Police brutality is not stopping Georgia’s protests

Pro-EU demonstrations continue, despite little help from abroad

Demonstrators hold portraits of activists injured during protests as they take part in an anti-government rally outside
Photograph: AP
|Tbilisi

THE FACE of the woman in the courtroom was covered in green and yellow bruises. She was being fined 500 lari ($178); police had arrested her at an anti-government protest. They had also, she said, shattered her orbital bone. Many of the demonstrators filing through Tbilisi’s courts have such wounds: bandaged skulls, splints on broken noses. They target the face, says Tamar Oniani of Georgia’s Association of Young Lawyers. It creates a public signal that “if you’re gonna come here again, then you receive this.”

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Beating protests”

From the December 21st 2024 edition

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