Colleagues campaign for release of Georgian doctor jailed in South Ossetia

Medical professionals across Georgia have held a five-minute silence in protest over the detention in South Ossetia of Georgian doctor Vazha Gaprindashvili.

Gaprindashvili was detained on 9 November. The authorities in South Ossetia have accused him of ‘illegal border crossing’, ‘provocative’ activities, and of participating in the 2008 August War.

On Monday, medics in several Georgian cities held ‘white coats’ rallies in solidarity with Gaprindashvili, an orthopaedic surgeon and President of the Georgian Society of Orthopaedy and Traumatology (GSOT).

Protests took place in Tbilisi, Kutaisi, Batumi, Rustavi, Zugdidi, Gori and other cities.

On 19 November, South Ossetia’s State Security Committee (KGB) stated that Gaprindashvili, 58, who they claimed was a Georgian Army reserve captain, ‘actively participated’ in the August 2008 war as an army doctor.

They said Gaprindashvili was apprehended by border guards near the village of Orchosani in Leningor (Akhalgori) district on 9 November, after he travelled from the Georgian-controlled village of Sakorintlo.

On 15 November, South Ossetia’s Leningor District Court remanded him into two-months pre-trial detention.

The KGB said that Gaprindashvili was one of 40 people detained for trespassing the ‘state border’ in November, adding that an ‘increased number of incidents’ was related to the Georgian authorities constructing a police checkpoint near the village of Tsnelisi (Uista).

They said that the South Ossetian authorities would respond to ‘provocative activities by Gaprindashvili and his curators’ exclusively in a legal manner to ‘prevent’ similar violations and an ‘escalation of tensions’, and to defend South Ossetian sovereignty.

Soon after the statement, Gaprindashvili’s spouse, Tamila Lapanashvili, denied the allegation, saying that her husband barely left his clinic in early August 2008 as he was working in Ghudushauri hospital in Tbilisi.

‘In good spirits’

On Monday, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said that they had visited Gaprindashvili in prison in the South Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali (Tskhinval) and that he had been able to receive a letter from his family and to send a reply.

His daughter, Irina Gaprindashvili, wrote on Facebook soon after that her father was in good spirits.

On 18 November, Shota Bidzinashvili, a resident of Bershueti, a village under Georgian control near South Ossetia, told Radio Tavisupleba that he had recently spent five days in prison in Tskhinvali together with Gaprindashvili.

They cited Bidzinashvili as saying that prisoners were fed only once a day, kept in damp and badly ventilated conditions, and that Gaprindashvili, who looked after him and other inmates, had protested the conditions to prison officials.

Georgian authorities said they were doing everything possible to involve the international community in facilitating Gaprindashvili’s release.

On 16 November, the US Embassy in Tbilisi called for Gaprindashvili’s immediate release and for crossing points between South Ossetia and Georgian-controlled areas to be reopened.

Britain’s Ambassador to Georgia, Justin McKenzie, also expressed support for Gaprindashvili.

Sincerely hope reports #Georgia|n Dr #Gaprindashvili will be released soon are confirmed. When access to healthcare & education is becoming critical for many in #SouthOssetia, hard to understand what Russia-backed de facto authorities gain by locking up medical professionals. — Justin McKenzieSmith (@JustinMcKenzieS) November 17, 2019

On 17 November, Georgia’s Minister for Reconciliation and Civic Equality, Ketevan Tsikhelashvili, said that they were expecting him to be freed ‘within several days’.

Worsened humanitarian situation

Gaprindashvil’s family has said they did not know the circumstances of his detention but assumed he was detained while visiting patients living in Akhalgori (Leningor) who had been unable to cross over to Georgia-controlled territory to receive medical treatment.

South Ossetian authorities closed crossing points with Georgia-controlled territory on 5 September, after the Georgian State Security Service installed a new checkpoint near the border.

[Read more on OC Media: South Ossetia tensions rise as Georgia sets up new police checkpoint]

Authorities in Tskhinvali reciprocated, installing their own checkpoint nearby, a week before closing the crossing points. They have since insisted that Georgia should remove the new installation.

On 29 October, the European Union Monitoring Mission in Georgia (EUMM) criticised the South Ossetian authorities for closing the crossing points, saying it was ‘depriving local communities of prompt and adequate medical care’.

The statement came after the death of 70-year-old Akhalgori resident Margo Martiashvili, who was barred from crossing the border to receive medical treatment.

In the past few days, Margo Martiashvili died after not being allowed to use the crossing point to get fast treatment. Tamar Gigauri is now fighting for her life after not being given the chance to receive the medical treatment available only on our side of the occupation line. pic.twitter.com/uwTXFGDPH7 — Salome Zourabichvili (@Zourabichvili_S) November 6, 2019



Georgian authorities have also expressed concern over the health of another Akhalgori resident, Tamar Gigauri, who was also refused permission to travel to Georgia-controlled territory for treatment.

Gigauri’s family have denied claims that Vazha Gaprindashvili was visiting them.

For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.