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SOS maestro

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2011

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Protest duration

December 16, 2011

Protest area

Tbilisi

Protest field

Media

Protest form

Demonstration

Protest cause

Dispute between Maestro owners

Organisers

Maestro journalists

Main demand

Police to make the founder of the Maestro management company, Erosi Kitsmarishvili, leave the TV company building and allow the legal director, Ilia Kikabidze, into the building

Protest target

Police

Slogans/banners

“SOS”, “Nutsubidze N93 – Media raided on this street”

Other visual elements

Whistles, leaflets with the inscription SOS

Protest outcome

No result

Important resources

Maestro’s story https://youtu.be/w7xYvD1YcT0?si=f9xWlsa7XZQIpJgk Battle for Maestro https://netgazeti.ge/news/11972/ Video clip https://youtu.be/IOox4UeBaZA?si=p3VW33wCk0R1wySA Liberal footage https://youtu.be/6Qg3WYTI8Oc?si=H6nadI4UD6oInJNs

On December 16, 2011, employees of the television company Maestro gathered near a police building in Tbilisi holding signs reading “SOS” and staged a protest. They demanded that police remove Erosi Kitsmarishvili, the founder of the channel’s management company, from the Maestro building and allow the lawful director, Ilia Kikabidze, to enter.

The conflict between the channel’s owners and Kitsmarishvili had started a month earlier. Kitsmarishvili, founder of the management company, had overseen Maestro since 2009. Mamuka Glonti owned 15% of the station and served as producer, while Ilia (Bacho) Kikabidze was the general director.

Tensions escalated when, on the morning of November 30, 2011, Kitsmarishvili arrived at Maestro’s building on Nutsubidze Street with about ten people, climbed over the fence, entered the premises, and declared that he had dismissed Kikabidze from his position.

Glonti locked himself and several employees inside the newsroom, while Kitsmarishvili and his group occupied the rest of the building. Police soon arrived and blocked the entrance, but several staff members and founders managed to enter and briefly broadcast live.

Glonti repeatedly accused Kitsmarishvili of acting with the support of the ruling United National Movement and attempting to seize control of the channel. Kitsmarishvili denied the allegations, claiming instead that Glonti wanted to remove him after billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili announced his entry into politics and expressed interest in temporarily purchasing Maestro under favorable terms.

Following the dispute, Maestro continued limited broadcasting from the Radio Maestro studio.

At the time, Erosi Kitsmarishvili was also a leader of the political movement Georgian Party.

Media

Maestro employees

Maestro employees

December 16, 2011. Photo by Nodar Tskhvirashvili, Radio Liberty.

Mamuka Glonti and other Maestro employees

Mamuka Glonti and other Maestro employees

December 16, 2011. Photo by Interpressnews.

Erosi Kitsmarishvili, 2011.

Erosi Kitsmarishvili, 2011.

Photo: Netgazeti.