Regionuli Ruka Arsebuli Da Samomavlo Ganvitareba
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Defusing Conflict in Tsalka District of Georgia: Migration, International Intervention and the Role of the State
Defusing Conflict in Tsalka District of Georgia: Migration, International Intervention and the Role of the State Jonathan Wheatley ECMI Working Paper #36 October 2006 EUROPEAN CENTRE FOR MINORITY ISSUES (ECMI) Schiffbruecke 12 (Kompagnietor) D-24939 Flensburg Germany +49-(0)461-14 14 9-0 fax +49-(0)461-14 14 9-19 internet: http://www.ecmi.de ECMI Working Paper #36 European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) Director: Dr. Marc Weller Copyright 2006 European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) Published in October 2006 by the European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) ISSN: 1435-9812 2 Table of Contents I. INTRODUCTION......................................................................................................................................................... 4 II. TSALKA DISTRICT: AN OVERVIEW................................................................................................................... 5 ECONOMY AND INFRASTRUCTURE .................................................................................................................................. 5 DEMOGRAPHY AND MIGRATION ..................................................................................................................................... 8 POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS AND THE ROLE OF THE STATE........................................................................................... 11 III. MAIN ARENAS OF CONFLICT IN TSALKA DISTRICT................................................................................ 14 INTER-COMMUNAL CONFLICT AT LOCAL LEVEL -
Law of Georgia Tax Code of Georgia
LAW OF GEORGIA TAX CODE OF GEORGIA SECTION I GENERAL PROVISIONS Chapter I - Georgian Tax System Article 1 - Scope of regulation In accordance with the Constitution of Georgia, this Code sets forth the general principles of formation and operation of the tax system of Georgia, governs the legal relations involved in the movement of passengers, goods and vehicles across the customs border of Georgia, determines the legal status of persons, tax payers and competent authorities involved in legal relations, determines the types of tax offences, the liability for violating the tax legislation of Georgia, the terms and conditions for appealing wrongful acts of competent authorities and of their officials, lays down procedures for settling tax disputes, and governs the legal relations connected with the fulfilment of tax liabilities. Law of Georgia No 5942 of 27 March 2012 - website, 12.4.2012 Article 2 - Tax legislation of Georgia 1. The tax legislation of Georgia comprises the Constitution of Georgia, international treaties and agreements, this Code and subordinate normative acts adopted in compliance with them. 2. The tax legislation of Georgia in effect at the moment when tax liability arises shall be used for taxation. 3. The Government of Georgia or the Minister for Finance of Georgia shall adopt/issue subordinate normative acts for enforcing this Code. 4. (Deleted - No 1886, 26.12.2013) 5. To enforce the tax legislation of Georgia, the head of the Legal Entity under Public Law (LEPL) within the Ministry for Finance of Georgia - the Revenue Service (‘the Revenue Service’) shall issue orders, internal instructions and guidelines on application of the tax legislation of Georgia by tax authorities. -
Georgia Sector Competitiveness Overview
Georgia Sector Competitiveness Overview Identification of Most Promising Manufacturing Sectors and Priority Actions to Accelerate Investment and Growth: Preliminary Recommendations to Government of Georgia June 2009 Sector Competitiveness Overview: Table of Contents Project background, objectives and approach Overall findings and conclusions • Most promising manufacturing sectors • Promising sectors beyond manufacturing • Cross-cutting issues • Recommended next steps Competitiveness assessments for all covered sectors Appendices • Organizations interviewed / visited • Companies and organizations operating in each sector • Existing reports and studies by sector 2 Project background, objectives and approach 3 Background With liberalization and deregulation, the Georgian economy has taken off in recent years World Bank Ease of Doing Business Nominal GDP Ranking, 2005 and 2008 US$ billions, 2004-2008 26% CAGR Georgia rises from 112 to 15 in Rankings Source: World Bank Doing Business 2006 and Doing Business 2009; Department of Statistics of Georgia 4 Background Both foreign and domestic investment have boomed, as investors have tapped into the growing market opportunities Total Private Capital Inflows Net FDI Inflows US$ millions, 2004-2008 US$ millions, 2004-2008 57% CAGR 27% CAGR Source: Department of Statistics of Georgia 5 Background However, most FDI has flowed into domestic infrastructure & services – as happens naturally when assets are privatized and demand takes off Composition of FDI by Sector, 2008 Natural result of asset sales -
Report, on Municipal Solid Waste Management in Georgia, 2012
R E P O R T On Municipal Solid Waste Management in Georgia 2012 1 1 . INTRODUCTION 1.1. FOREWORD Wastes are one of the greatest environmental chal- The Report reviews the situation existing in the lenges in Georgia. This applies both to hazardous and do- field of municipal solid waste management in Georgia. mestic wastes. Wastes are disposed in the open air, which It reflects problems and weak points related to munic- creates hazard to human’s health and environment. ipal solid waste management as related to regions in Waste represents a residue of raw materials, semi- the field of collection, transportation, disposal, and re- manufactured articles, other goods or products generat- cycling. The Report also reviews payments/taxes re- ed as a result of the process of economic and domestic lated to the waste in the country and, finally, presents activities as well as consumption of different products. certain recommendations for the improvement of the As for waste management, it generally means distribu- noted field. tion of waste in time and identification of final point of destination. It’s main purpose is reduction of negative impact of waste on environment, human health, or es- 1.2. Modern Approaches to Waste thetic condition. In other words, sustainable waste man- Management agement is a certain practice of resource recovery and reuse, which aims to the reduction of use of natural re- The different waste management practices are ap- sources. The concept of “waste management” includes plied to different geographical or geo-political locations. the whole cycle from the generation of waste to its final It is directly proportional to the level of economic de- disposal. -
World Bank Document
Document of The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Public Disclosure Authorized Report No: 66462-GE PROJECT APPRAISAL DOCUMENT ON A PROPOSED CREDIT IN THE AMOUNT OF SDR 25.8 MILLION Public Disclosure Authorized (US$40.00 MILLION EQUIVALENT) AND A PROPOSED LOAN IN THE AMOUNT OF US$30 MILLION TO GEORGIA Public Disclosure Authorized FOR THE SECOND SECONDARY AND LOCAL ROADS PROJECT (SLRP-II) FEBRUARY 21, 2012 Sustainable Development Department South Caucasus Country Unit Europe and Central Asia Region Public Disclosure Authorized This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization. CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (Exchange Rate Effective January 1, 2012) Currency Unit = Georgian Lari (GEL) GEL 1.66 = US$ 1.00 US$1.551 = SDR 1.00 FISCAL YEAR January 1 – December 31 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS AADT Average Annual Daily Traffic MCC Millennium Challenge Corporation ADB Asian Development Bank MENR Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources CPS Country Partnership Strategy MESD Ministry of Economy and Sustainable Development EA Environmental Assessment MRDI Ministry of Regional Development and Infrastructure EIB European Investment Bank NBG National Bank of Georgia EIRR Economic Internal Rate of Return NCB National Competitive Bidding EMP Environmental Management Plan NPV Net Present Value ESMF Environmental and Social Management Framework ORAF Operational Risk Assessment Framework FA Financing Agreement PAD -
„THE DEVELOPMENT of MINING and GEOLOGY IS the PRECONDITION for the REVIVAL of ECONOMY” September 23-24, 2021
სსიპ გრიგოლ წულუკიძის სამთო ინსტიტუტი LEPL Grigol Tsulukidze Mining Institute Mineralogical Society of Georgia, G. Tsulukidze Mining Insitute and Georgian Technical University Convene International Scientific-Practical Conference on Up-to-date Problems of Geology: „THE DEVELOPMENT OF MINING AND GEOLOGY IS THE PRECONDITION FOR THE REVIVAL OF ECONOMY” September 23-24, 2021 Current problems of mining and geology The role of mineral resources in the development of the country's economy Natural hazards and environmental protection Mining technologies Geology Geophisics Geography Conference Venue: Sep 23 - Georgian Technical University 77 Kostava st., Administrative Building, Georgian Technical University, 0160, Tbilisi. Sep 24 - RMG GOLD Kazreti, Bolnisi Municipality Language: English, Georgian. Presentation mode: Oral, Poster. The conference materials will be published as an abstract-book. A certificate will be granted to conference participants. The deadline for registration and abstract submission is 30.04. 2021. Application for participation in the conference must be filled in Georgian and English. The abstracts should be sent to e-mail: [email protected] For additional information see the web-site: www.msgeorgia2012.com Contact persons: Maia Kobaxidze Asmat Shekiladze Ketevan Gabarashvili Tel: (+995) 599 91-67-68 Tel: (+995) 599 70-84-28 Tel: (+995) 593 31 73 97 Guidelines for abstracts 1 - The abstract should be represented in English; appropriate Georgian or Russian versions must be attached; 2 - The abstract should -
Public Defender of Georgia
2018 The Public Defender of Georgia www.ombudsman.ge 1 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE PUBLIC DEFENDER OF GEORGIA, 2018 This publication has been produced with the assistance of the European Union. The contents of this publication are the sole responsibility of the author and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the European Union. 2 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE PUBLIC DEFENDER OF GEORGIA THE SITUATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS IN GEORGIA 2018 2018 www.ombudsman.ge www.ombudsman.ge 3 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE PUBLIC DEFENDER OF GEORGIA, 2018 OFFICE OF PUBLIC DEFENDER OF GEORGIA 6, Ramishvili str, 0179, Tbilisi, Georgia Tel: +995 32 2913814; +995 32 2913815 Fax: +995 32 2913841 E-mail: [email protected] 4 CONTENTS INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................................................................13 1. FULFILMENT OF THE RECOMMENDATIONS MADE BY THE PUBLIC DEFENDER OF GEORGIA IN THE 2017 PARLIAMENTARY REPORT ......................................................................19 2. RIGHT TO LIFE .....................................................................................................................................28 2.1. CASE OF TEMIRLAN MACHALIKASHVILI .............................................................................21 2.2. MURDER OF JUVENILES ON KHORAVA STREET ...............................................................29 2.3. OUTCOMES OF THE STUDY OF THE CASE-FILES OF THE INVESTIGATION CONDUCTED ON THE ALLEGED MURDER OF ZVIAD GAMSAKHURDIA, THE FIRST -
Twenty-Fifth Quarterly Report
TWENTY-FIFTH QUARTERLY REPORT Award Period: October 31, 2014 – October 31, 2021 Reporting Period: October 1 – December 31, 2020 Submitted to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) under the terms of Cooperative Agreement No. AID-114-A-14-00008 by the East-West Management Institute, Inc. Tamuna Karosanidze, Chief of Party, Tbilisi: [email protected] Ana Drakic, EWMI ACCESS Project Director, New York: [email protected] #5 Marjanishvili St., Third Floor • Tbilisi 0102 Georgia • Tel (995 0 32) 2202 444 • www.facebook.com/EWMI.ACCESS CONTENTS ACRONYMS ............................................................................................................................. 3 Background ............................................................................................................................... 4 Executive Summary ................................................................................................................. 5 Component One: Citizens become more aware of and involved in CSO activities ........ 6 Key Activities and Accomplishments ................................................................................................................ 6 Key Issues and Challenges ............................................................................................................................ 16 Plans for Next Quarter ..................................................................................................................................... 16 Component Two: Improving CSO -
Reserved Domains
Countries: (.ge; .edu.ge; .org.ge; .net.ge; .pvt.ge; .school.ge) afghanistan cameroon ghana lebanon nigeria spain zambia albania canada greece lesotho norway srilanka zimbabwe algeria centralafricanrepublic grenada liberia oman sudan andorra chad guatemala libya pakistan suriname angola chile guinea liechtenstein palau swaziland antiguaandbarbuda china guinea-bissau lithuania palestina sweden argentina colombia guyana luxembourg panama switzerland armenia comoros haiti macau papuanewguinea syria aruba congo honduras macedonia paraguay taiwan australia costarica hongkong madagascar peru tajikistan austria croatia hungary malawi philippines tanzania azerbaijan cuba iceland malaysia poland thailand bahama curacao india maldives portugal timor-leste bahrain cyprus indonesia mali qatar togo bangladesh czechia iran malta romania tonga barbados denmark iraq marshallislands russia trinidadandtobago belarus djibouti ireland mauritania rwanda tunisia belgium dominica israel mauritius saintlucia turkey belize dominicanrepublic italy mexico samoa turkmenistan benin ecuador jamaica micronesia sanmarino tuvalu bhutan egypt japan moldova saudiarabia uganda birma elsalvador jordan monaco senegal ukraine bolivia equatorialguinea kazakhstan mongolia serbia unitedarabemirates bosniaandherzegovina eritrea kenya montenegro seychelles uk botswana estonia kiribati morocco sierraleone england brazil ethiopia northkorea mozambique singapore unitedkingdom brunei fiji korea namibia sintmaarten uruguay bulgaria finland southkorea nauru slovakia uzbekistan burkinafaso -
Report to the Georgian Government on the Visit to Georgia Carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture An
CPT/Inf (2015) 42 Report to the Georgian Government on the visit to Georgia carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 1 to 11 December 2014 The Georgian Government has requested the publication of this report and of its response. The Government’s response is set out in document CPT/Inf (2015) 43. Strasbourg, 15 December 2015 Note: In accordance with Article 11, paragraph 3, of the European Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, certain names have been deleted. - 3 - CONTENTS Copy of the letter transmitting the CPT’s report............................................................................5 Executive summary ............................................................................................................................6 I. INTRODUCTION...................................................................................................................12 A. Dates of the visit and composition of the delegation ............................................................12 B. Establishments visited.............................................................................................................13 C. Consultations held by the delegation and co-operation encountered.................................13 D. Immediate observations under Article 8, paragraph 5, of the Convention .......................15 E. National Preventive Mechanism ............................................................................................15 -
Realizing the Urban Potential in Georgia: National Urban Assessment
REALIZING THE URBAN POTENTIAL IN GEORGIA National Urban Assessment ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK REALIZING THE URBAN POTENTIAL IN GEORGIA NATIONAL URBAN ASSESSMENT ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO license (CC BY 3.0 IGO) © 2016 Asian Development Bank 6 ADB Avenue, Mandaluyong City, 1550 Metro Manila, Philippines Tel +63 2 632 4444; Fax +63 2 636 2444 www.adb.org Some rights reserved. Published in 2016. Printed in the Philippines. ISBN 978-92-9257-352-2 (Print), 978-92-9257-353-9 (e-ISBN) Publication Stock No. RPT168254 Cataloging-In-Publication Data Asian Development Bank. Realizing the urban potential in Georgia—National urban assessment. Mandaluyong City, Philippines: Asian Development Bank, 2016. 1. Urban development.2. Georgia.3. National urban assessment, strategy, and road maps. I. Asian Development Bank. The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) or its Board of Governors or the governments they represent. ADB does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this publication and accepts no responsibility for any consequence of their use. This publication was finalized in November 2015 and statistical data used was from the National Statistics Office of Georgia as available at the time on http://www.geostat.ge The mention of specific companies or products of manufacturers does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by ADB in preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned. By making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area, or by using the term “country” in this document, ADB does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area. -
Realizing the Urban Potential in Georgia
Realizing the Urban Potential in Georgia National Urban Assessment: Executive Summary RealizingRealizing thethe UrbanUrban PotentialPotential inin GeorgiaGeorgia ThisNationalNational publication UrbanUrban AssessmentAssessment details the:: Executive Executive rapid assessment SummarySummary of the urban sector in Georgia to understand key urbanization trends and patterns of growth and to analyze challenges and opportunities. It gives a snapshot of the state ofThisThis urban publicationpublication aairs at detailsdetails the national thethe rapidrapid level assessmentassessment with an urbanization ofof thethe urbanurban profile, sectorsector governance inin GeorgiaGeorgia to toand understandunderstand urban management keykey urbanizationurbanization profile, capacitytrendstrends andand needs patternspatterns assessment, ofof growthgrowth urban andand financetoto analyzeanalyze matrix, challengeschallenges and a “E” andand opportunities.assessmentopportunities. covering ItIt givesgives economic, aa snapshotsnapshot environmental, ofof thethe statestate andofof urbanurban social aairsaairs equity atat profiles. thethe nationalnational This documentlevellevel withwith anan is noturbanizationurbanization a strategy profile,profile, but the governancegovernance basis for developing andand urbanurban a managementmanagementnational urban profile,profile, strategycapacitycapacity and needsneeds road assessment,assessment, map for integrated urbanurban financefinance investments matrix,matrix, toandand maximize aa “E”“E” assessmentassessment development