At least 4,342 prison inmates have been released
in Georgia under an amnesty for some 5,000. But although the government
says they were wrongly imprisoned - or mistreated in jail - there are
fears about what impact their freedom could have on one of Europe's
safest cities.
As the first prisoners walk free out of Gldani prison in
Tbilisi - many for the first time in years - they are hugged and kissed
by crying mothers and wives.
It is an emotional scene because friends and relatives know that their loved ones are not only free - but also safe.
It was here in this men's prison that inmates were filmed
apparently being physically and sexually abused - a scandal which helped
to oust the then government in last October's elections.
Many of the inmates say that before the change of government
they were regularly beaten by guards and subjected to horrific abuse -
reports of rape are common.
Those being released tell me they were jailed for their
political convictions - simply because they opposed the government at
the time, for example by taking part in an anti-government protest in
May 2011.
But I might have actually met some of these men before - at that protest.
The demonstration turned violent and four people died.
The fault lay partly with some of the police officers, who
reacted heavy-handedly, using rubber bullets to disperse the crowd - and
in the confusion beating peaceful protestors and journalists with
batons. I know, because I was hit myself.
Before the police moved in I talked to some of the
demonstrators - including men who were ripping up rocks from the
pavement, ready to throw into the crowds, and who hid sharpened metal
sticks and clubs under their jackets.
These were not peaceful protesters - but thugs looking for a fight.
Looking at the happy scene of families being reunited outside
the prison, it is impossible to know whether any of these men are the
ones I saw acting violently on that day.
The first 200 of the 3,500 inmates due to be released were freed from Gldani prison in Tbilisi last week
But President Mikheil Saakashvili, who led the former government, says criminals are being released back into society.
Many other Georgians are equally worried. Especially those
who remember how violent Georgia used to be, before President
Saakashvili took over almost a decade ago.
The country was in effect run by organised crime bosses,
known as thieves-in-law - a highly codified criminal gang structure,
which dates back to resistance against the communist state in Stalin's
1930s gulags.
Throughout the 1990s crime was a part of daily life in
Georgia. Break-ins and street robberies were common, people would wind
down their car windows when they parked, so that thieves could just look
in, without having to smash the windows first.
Neighbourhoods would rely on the local mafia boss to keep
order, rather than deal with corrupt police officers, who were rarely
paid, and so lived off bribes.
That all changed when Saakashvili, and his team of
Western-educated reformers, swept to power in the US-backed 2003 Rose
Revolution.
He came down hard on crime: young police
officers were recruited and paid well - and the thieves-in-law and their
criminal gangs were either jailed, or fled the country.
And today, although you can still see bars on the windows of
many houses as a remnant of the old crime-ridden days, Georgia is safer
than any of the Western European cities I know.
One banal example: the other day, our producer got back to
her car - she had not only left the car unlocked, with her laptop
sitting inside, she had forgotten to even close the door at all, which
was left ajar.
After a full day's filming, the laptop was still sitting there in full view. I just cannot imagine that in most Western cities.
So, many people are now worried about what will happen without the previous government's tough approach to crime.
Will the criminal gangs come back to Georgia, if they think
the new government is soft on crime? And are some of the mafia bosses
among those who are now being released?
Over the last decade, the country has swung from anarchy and chaos, to what many said was becoming a dictatorial police state.
Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili cracked down on crime after his election in 2003
Now there is a chance for something in-between: a system that
is neither authoritarian nor anarchic. Most Georgians have had enough of
both extremes.
But this still remains a country in love with drama - where a
leader can be praised as the country's saviour one minute and then
condemned as a war criminal the next.
And the current prevailing mood, as thousands walk free from
jail, is that anyone who was imprisoned by the previous government is a
political prisoner.
Given Georgia's crime-ridden history that is clearly not the case.
Until now the country's prisons had contained both innocent
victims, who had suffered abuse, and the corrupt criminals who once made
Georgia so dangerous.
The challenge for the new government is knowing who's who.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-21179292
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