Bush Should Urge Inquiry Into November Georgian Crackdown

Wednesday, March 19 2008 @ 11:17 AM EDT

Edited by: Kandy Ringer

Riot Police Used Excessive Force to Disperse Peaceful Demonstrations

Map of Georgia, 2006
Map of Georgia, 2006

Photo Credit: The University of Texas at Austin.

The map shown above in it's full size is available in BBSNews Maps.

BBSNews 2008-03-19 -- New York (HRW) President George W. Bush should urge a full investigation into the November 2007 violent crackdown in Georgia during his meeting in Washington on March 19 with President Mikheil Saakashvili, Human Rights Watch said today.

"There still hasn't been a comprehensive investigation into the use of force on November 7," said Holly Cartner, Human Rights Watch's Europe and Central Asia director. "No ally of Georgia is in a better position than the US to pursue this with the Georgian government."

On November 7, 2007, riot police used excessive force, including water cannons, teargas, and rubber bullets to disperse the largely peaceful demonstrations in Georgia's capital Tbilisi. Law enforcement personnel, many of them masked, pursued fleeing demonstrators of all ages, kicking and punching them, and striking them with wooden truncheons, wooden poles, and other objects. They appeared to fire rubber bullets indiscriminately and directly at fleeing demonstrators. Heavily armed police and security personnel stormed a private television station, Imedi, threatening and ejecting the staff, as well as damaging and destroying much of the station's equipment, forcing the station off the air for almost a month.

In a letter to President Bush last week, Human Rights Watch emphasized that the Georgian government took a number of important steps to diffuse the political crisis since November 7, 2007, but that a thorough and comprehensive investigation into the use of force is still lacking.

"The United States has invested tremendous political and financial capital in promoting democracy in Georgia," said Cartner. "It should promote justice in Georgia today as vigorously as it has championed Georgia's democracy in the past."

The letter from Human Rights Watch to President Bush is available online.

The December 2007 Human Rights Watch report, "Crossing the Line: Georgia's Violent Dispersal of Protesters and Raid on Imedi Television," is available online.

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