**Georgia Fails to Fulfill Human Rights Obligations**
The Council of Europe’s latest report shows that Georgia has failed to meet its human rights obligations in 2024. The Committee of Ministers, which oversees the execution of court rulings, received 13 new cases against Georgia for supervision.
**Number of Cases Increases**
This is a slight decrease from 15 cases in 2023 but higher than the 10 cases in 2022. By the end of the year, 73 cases remained under the Committee’s supervision, including eight leading cases classified as priority cases.
**Delays and Payments**
Despite efforts to resolve some cases, delays remained in three others where full payment was confirmed in nine cases. The report highlights that since Georgia ratified the European Convention on Human Rights, 191 cases have been brought before the Committee of Ministers, including 78 leading and 113 repetitive cases.
**Pending Cases**
As of December 31, 2024, 73 cases were pending before the Committee of Ministers. Among these cases, 27 were classified as leading cases, while 46 were repetitive. Eight leading cases were classified under enhanced procedure, with nine of them pending for more than five years.
**Action Plans and Reports**
The Georgian authorities submitted three action plans, 11 action reports, and one communication in 2024. Updates were still awaited in three cases where feedback had been provided before the start of the year.
**Just Satisfaction**
Full payment was registered in nine cases in 2024. However, confirmation of payment and/or default interest was still pending in three cases where the payment deadline had passed more than six months ago.
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