During the videoconference meetings with stakeholders in Georgia, the OSCE/ODIHR-Venice Commission delegation was informed that the amendments did not aim to ban the right to boycott sessions as set out in Article 91 (10) of the Rules of Procedure of Parliament, and that this provision would remain untouched. Rather, the amendments sought to ban cases of “sabotage”, which were to be distinguished from acts of boycotts, and the ongoing refusal of the opposition parties to take part in parliamentary sessions is perceived by the ruling party and the law drafters as a case of a “sabotage”, not a boycott.