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Street Vendors’ Rally at City Hall

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1996

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Protest date

June 17, 1996

Protest area

Tbilisi

Protest field

Social problems

Protest cause

Clearing the “Children’s World” department store area of street vendors.

Protest form

Rally

Protest demand

They demanded that street vendors be given the opportunity to work.

Protest outcome

They promised that consultations would be held at the Didube district administration to resolve the issue, and that displaced street vendors would be exempt from fees and given trading places free of charge.

On June 17, 1996, street vendors held a protest in front of Tbilisi City Hall. Around one hundred people gathered, demanding a meeting with the mayor. Their anger was sparked by a June 12 police raid in Didube District, where street vendors were forcibly removed from the area around the “Children’s World” department store. Authorities argued that selling goods was only permitted within market territories, not on the streets.

According to the vendors, market fees were unaffordable: $300 to buy a stall, 20 lari to reserve a spot for one month, and 3 lari daily fees. Many claimed they could not pay such amounts.

While the mayor did not appear, Deputy Mayor Melor Tkeshelashvili met with protest representatives. He told the newspaper Resonance that on June 19 the Didube district authorities would hold consultations to resolve the issue. Many of the street vendors were displaced persons (referred to in the press as “refugees” at the time). Tkeshelashvili said they would be exempt from fees and given stalls free of charge.

This promise, however, angered protesters, who argued that they had received similar assurances many times before with no results. Some vendors, mostly women, attempted to block traffic by lying down on the road, but police prevented them. A minor scuffle ensued, after which the street vendors’ protest at City Hall ended.

Media

Newspaper report on the street vendors’ protest

Newspaper report on the street vendors’ protest

Newspaper “Resonance,” 1996