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Demonstration in Sarpi

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2018

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Protest date

January 16, 2018

Protest area

Region

Protest field

Politics

Protest form

Demonstration

Protest cause

Turkey announced that a new rule had been put into effect, according to which foreign citizens could only stay in the country for 90 days without a visa.

Organisers

Citizens who had to move to Turkey for work.

Main demand

Old border crossing rules for Georgian citizens to remain in force

Protest target

Government of Georgia

Protest outcome

The Chairman of the Government of Adjara met with the Governor of Artvin, Republic of Turkey, and they agreed that restrictions would not be imposed on Georgian citizens.

On January 16, 2018, Georgian citizens who frequently crossed the border for work gathered in Sarpi, at the Georgia–Turkey border, to protest a new rule introduced by Turkey on January 1, 2018. According to the regulation, after using a 90-day stay period, foreign nationals would not be allowed to re-enter Turkey for the next three months without a residence or work permit. Even a one-hour visit would count as a full day.

Residents of the Adjara and Guria regions were among those most affected, as many of them regularly crossed into Turkey—especially to the Artvin province—to work in shops, hotels, or seasonal agricultural jobs like tea and hazelnut harvesting. The new restrictions threatened their livelihoods, as many relied on this cross-border employment as their primary source of income.

Following the protest, on February 16, the Chairman of the Government of Adjara, Zurab Pataradze, met with the Governor of Turkey’s Artvin province. After the talks, Pataradze announced that Georgian citizens would be temporarily exempt from the new restrictions and could continue crossing the border under the previous rules.

Media

Protest in Sarpi, 2018

Protest in Sarpi, 2018

Photo: Radio Liberty