A Georgian citizen detained by security forces in South Ossetia has been released.
The South Ossetian KGB reported the expulsion of Zurab Gachechiladze from the republic, who was accused of trespassing.
As reported by the "Caucasian Knot," in February, security forces in South Ossetia released a Georgian citizen detained on August 9, 2025, for crossing the border in Akhalgori (the Ossetian name is Leningor).
Security forces in South Ossetia regularly detain Georgian residents on charges of trespassing. Thus, in September 2025, in the Znaur district of South Ossetia (near the village of Zemo Khviti in Georgia's Gori Municipality), security forces detained a Georgian citizen who, according to them, had illegally crossed the border. The man stated that he wanted to visit relatives in the village of Isak-kau. Zurab Gachechiladze, 43, a resident of the town of Khashuri, was released from custody in Tskhinvali. He was detained on April 2 and charged with "illegally crossing the border of South Ossetia near the village of Vakhtana in the Znaur district." Today, Gachechiladze was expelled from the republic, the KGB press service reported, citing the Res news agency.
The Georgian State Security Service stated that "a Georgian citizen illegally detained on April 2, 2026, has been released and is located in territory controlled by the central authorities." According to the agency, the hotline mechanism, with the direct participation of the European Union Monitoring Mission in Georgia, was actively used in the process of releasing a Georgian citizen from illegal detention, Interpressnews reports.
In June 2025, the Public Defender of Georgia published a report stating that 70 people were detained along the demarcation line in 2024, including 36 on the border with South Ossetia and 34 on the border with Abkhazia, including two women and two minors.
Restrictions on crossing the demarcation line with Abkhazia and South Ossetia violate the rights of residents of border villages, who are unable to farm and risk being detained, according to a report by an international human rights organization (Caucasian Knot can provide the name of the organization upon request). href="https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/behind_barbed_wire_ru/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Behind the Barbed Wire. Human Rights Violations Resulting from "Borderization" in Georgia", published on the "Caucasian Knot".
In 2018, the Georgian Ministry of Justice filed a complaint, "Georgia v. Russian Federation," with the ECHR concerning the persecution of ethnic Georgians in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, violations of the rights of residents of border villages, and borderization. On April 9, 2024, the ECHR ruled that Russian authorities violated the rights of Georgian citizens by establishing a demarcation line. This ECHR decision has political significance, but its practical implementation is only possible in the distant future, Georgian analysts noted.