Nino Lomjaria, founder of the civil platform "Georgia's European Orbit," explained which state institutions dismissed public servants.
According to Lomjaria, citizens were dismissed from around 20 state institutions, including the Administration of the Government of Georgia, the Parliament, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Tbilisi City Hall.
She stated that the dismissal of public servants is linked to their protest against the Georgian Dream party's decision on November 28.
"Although the formal reason for dismissal is usually cited as the expiration of employment contracts, in reality, public servants who signed protest statements on behalf of their respective agencies, demanded adherence to Article 78 of the Constitution, participated in protest rallies, or publicly criticized state violence against peaceful protesters—often via social media—were dismissed. The public agencies from which employees were dismissed for discriminatory political motives include the National Agency of Public Registry, Tbilisi City Hall’s Public Relations Agency, the Transport and Urban Development Agency of Tbilisi City Hall, the National Agency for Crime Prevention, Non-Custodial Sentences, and Probation, the Central Election Commission, the Department of Tourism and Resorts of Adjara, the Parliament of Georgia, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Public Service Hall, the 112 Public Safety Management Center, Rustavi Municipality, Adigeni Municipality, the National Agency of State Property, the Administration of the Government of Georgia, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the National Bureau of Forensics, the Legal Aid Bureau, the Personal Data Protection Service, and the Youth Municipality of Mestia," said Lomjaria.
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