Content is being updated — some hyperlinks may be missing
GE

Protest of traders from the Deserters’ Market

left arrow

2007

right arrow
Toggle details

Protest duration

August 1-4, 2007

Protest area

Tbilisi

Protest field

Politics

Protest form

Demonstration

Protest cause

The building of the Tbilisi Central Supermarket, the so-called “Deserters’ Market”, was sold

Organisers

Tbilisi Central Supermarket traders, Labor Party, Ioseb Shatberashvili

Main demand

Traders should remain in the Deserters’ Market

Protest target

Tbilisi City Hall

Protest outcome

Traders were evicted from the building and the demolition of the building began

In the summer of 2007, traders from Tbilisi’s central marketplace, commonly known as the “Deserters’ Market,” held several protest rallies. The market building had been sold, and the city government offered to relocate the traders to a different site — a proposal that many resisted.

On August 4, the market’s new owner, the British company Herald Trade Company, began demolishing the building before most traders had the chance to remove their goods. Later, the traders agreed to the alternative location proposed by Tbilisi City Hall.

After the market’s closure, the city administration began registering the affected workers to redistribute them across other markets in Tbilisi. The municipality primarily offered relocation to the newly opened Champion 2004 shopping center in Mukhiani. The center’s management claimed they could accommodate all Deserters’ Market traders and even provide certain benefits.

Tbilisi City Hall also promised each displaced trader a compensation payment of 100 GEL.

The protest movement of the Deserters’ Market traders was led by Labour Party representative Ioseb Shatberashvili, who, along with a group of vendors, opposed the sale of the market. Following several demonstrations, tensions escalated — on the day the market was closed, clashes broke out between traders and police. Six vendors were detained, two of whom were released shortly afterward.

Ultimately, the traders were unable to retain their stalls inside the Deserters’ Market building, and new informal trading points emerged in the surrounding area.

Media

Deserters’ Market in 2004

Deserters’ Market in 2004

Source: National Parliamentary Library of Georgia