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Opposition leader arrested at Georgia anti-Government protest

Nika Melia, the leader of the Coalition for Change, has since been released on bail

Felix Light
Monday 03 February 2025 09:50 GMT
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Georgian police detain Nika Melia as anti-government demonstrators attempt to block a highway entrance to the capital Tbilisi on February 2
Georgian police detain Nika Melia as anti-government demonstrators attempt to block a highway entrance to the capital Tbilisi on February 2 (AFP via Getty Images)

The leader of Georgia’s largest opposition party was arrested on Sunday as thousands of demonstrators again took to the streets demanding new parliamentary elections.

Nika Melia, the leader of the Coalition for Change, has since been released on bail after detention for an administrative offence, according to the Interfax News Agency.

"At the police station, I was sitting on a chair in handcuffs and was kicked by a police officer," Interfax cited Melia as telling journalists afterwards.

There was no immediate comment from the police.

Melia was one of several anti-government protesters arrested on on Sunday as thousands of demonstrators briefly blocked a motorway on the edge of the capital Tbilisi.

Protesters scuffle with police during an anti-government rally demanding new parliamentary elections in Tbilisi, Georgia February 2
Protesters scuffle with police during an anti-government rally demanding new parliamentary elections in Tbilisi, Georgia February 2 (REUTERS)

Georgia's Ministry Of Internal Affairs had said in a statement before the protest that the police would ensure the rally took place "in a peaceful environment, within the limits established by law."

Former Tbilisi Mayor Giorgi Ugulava was also arrested, local media reported.

Georgians have been rallying nightly since November, when the ruling Georgian Dream party said it was suspending European Union accession talks until 2028, abruptly halting a long-standing national goal.

Georgian Dream held onto power in a disputed election in October that opposition parties say was rigged. The government says the vote was fair and free.

Protests had dwindled in recent weeks but they resumed with greater force on Sunday when thousands of people gathered outside a shopping complex on the northern edge of Tbilisi and briefly blocked the road leading out of the city.

Police presence at the rally was considerable. Earlier on Sunday, the Interior Ministry warned protesters in a statement that blocking the motorway was a criminal offence.

One protester was seen by the side of the road, unconscious. Reuters was unable to establish what had happened to him.

Unverified video footage posted on social media showed scores of police in balaclavas beating protesters on the streets and others carrying away injured demonstrators into ambulances.

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