“They didn’t ask me many questions. They didn’t ask to see anything. They weren’t really interested in anything, no questions were asked, they just told me to wait and that’s it. I had to wait 14 hours, they only told me I could take my passport and go back if I wanted,” David Frenkel, a photojournalist at Mediazona news outlet who was turned away at the Georgian border in March, recalls. “They didn’t know anything themselves, they even apologised at some point that it’s not up to them, they are waiting for a response from higher-ranking officials. Fourteen hours later they told me that the response was negative.”
According to the stories of other Russian citizens who tried to enter Georgia, the border guards also filed requests to check their names in a database. At first glance, there were no formal reasons to refuse entry to Frenkel: according to the journalist, he had not visited South Ossetia nor Abkhazia (breakaway states in the South Caucasus recognised by the UN and the Georgian government as part of Georgia — translator’s note). “Besides, I visited Georgia six months before that, there were no problems,” he added.