The Joint Statement of the Civil Society and Religious Organizations
Tbilisi. On November 7, Civil Society and Religious Organizations released the joint statement. "The below signatory organizations express our negative attitude once again in terms of the draft initiated in the Parliament qualifying public expression of hatred towards sacred objects, religious organizations, clergymen or worshippers by an individual, aimed at hurting religious sentiments as administrative offence and envisaging subsequent administrative liability. ...We believe that Parliament should refrain from adopting the law since it falls short of Constitutional and international human rights standards", says the statement.
Riot police disperse protestors rallying against Georgia’s retraction of EU bid
On November 28, 2024, Georgia's ruling party, Georgian Dream, announced the suspension of European Union accession negotiations until 2028, citing alleged "blackmail and manipulation" by EU officials....
In Georgia, 1 in 2 women aged 15-69 in Georgia has experienced at least one form of violence in her lifetime.
1 in 4 of ever-partnered women in Georgia has experienced violence from her intimate p...
The web portal CsoGeorgia.org releases a weekly newsletter of grants competition, contests, vacancies, fellowships, and tenders for civil society organizations, and for any interested person.
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The web portal CsoGeorgia.org releases a weekly newsletter of grants competition, contests, vacancies, fellowships, and tenders for civil society organizations, and for any interested person.
News
Georgian NGOs, are starting a new phase of the fight against “Russian law.”
The European Court of Human Rights has registered a lawsuit of 16 media organizations, 120 civil society organizations, ...