GENEVA (27 June 2024)
Georgia violated its child rights obligations by failing to take immediate intervention to address the frequent physical
and psychological abuse of children who lived in a close-type orphanage run by the Georgian Orthodox Church, the UN
Child Rights Committee has found.
The Committee issued a Decision today after reviewing a complaint filed on behalf of 57 children residing in Ninotsminda
St Nino Children’s Boarding School at the time of submission.
Of these 57 children, the individual cases of M.L. and L.K. revealed the extent of abuse and mistreatment. Born in 2008,
M.L. was placed in Ninotsminda St Nino from the age of three to thirteen where she suffered harsh punishments for
bedwetting. Caregivers would often instruct older children to “discipline” her and other children by hitting them with
sticks or hands. She was also compelled to take psychotic medicines when she was 11. Another child, L.K., born in 2003,
faced similar hardships, including inadequate food, poor hygiene, and restricted movement. Her brother, who had
disabilities, also experienced neglect and abuse.
“Children deprived of their family environment are entitled to special protection and assistance from the State, which
is their custodian,” Committee member Benoit Van Keirsbilck said, adding that the Georgian government is thus held
accountable for what happened behind the closed doors of an orphanage or any other similar institutions.
Ninotsminda St. Nino Children’s Boarding School is a residential facility for orphans and children without parental
care. Its dire condition was first identified by the Public Defender’s Office of Georgia in a 2015 report. The report
pointed out frequent psychological and physical bullying among children, as well as corporal punishments by caregivers
such as prostrations, skipping meals, confinement, and forced crawling. Nonetheless, the orphanage was granted a care
license in 2016 after the new edition of the Law of Georgia on Licensing of Educational Activities took effect.
The Public Defender’s Office issued a follow-up report in 2018, underlying the systemic problems within the orphanage
and the urgent need for oversight and improvement in the care of the children. For almost a year since June 2020, the
Public Defender’s Office was repeatedly denied access to the orphanage.
Noting that the authorities had not been able to monitor children at the orphanage, NGO Partnership for Human Rights
first took the matter to various courts in Tbilisi and eventually brought the case to the Committee in May 2021.
The Committee immediately granted interim measures in favour of 57 children requesting access for the Public Defender’s
Office to the orphanage.
One month later, the Public Defender's Office was allowed to enter to undertake a comprehensive assessment, which
resulted in the transfer of 27 children to alternative care.
As of November 2021, 15 children, including at least one with a disability, still lived at the orphanage, although the
issues raised remained unresolved.
After reviewing the complaint, the Committee found that Georgia had failed to protect the children in Ninotsminda St
Nino Children’s Boarding School, who were deprived of their family environment and some of whom had disabilities, from
violence and abuse, in violation of their obligations under the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
The Committee requested Georgia to provide effective reparation to the child victims, including adequate compensation
and rehabilitation, a public apology, reassessment of those still under State care, and independent investigation and
prosecution of those responsible. Reparation measures should be coordinated with the child victims to incorporate their
views.
“We are appalled at the situation these children deprived of their families, some of them from a very young age and
throughout their childhood. The treatment they received will have life-long consequences on their development” Van
Keirsbilck said.
“Regular and independent monitoring of institutions where children reside is essential to ensure that the treatment and
living conditions comply with child rights standards and that these violations are not repeated in the future,” he
added.