“A tent, polyethylene sheet or anything that is not dangerous can be set up near an administrative body. This is a democratic standard, this is how rallies are conducted in other countries. Anyone has the right to the above, especially those who have spent nights there for two weeks and the health of some of them has worsened,” stated the Public Defender, who arrived at the rally of parents of children diagnosed with achondroplasia, expressing his protest against the illegal actions of the police.
On April 30, on the 14th day of protests, police officers removed banners reading “Medicine for children” from the iron fence installed near the Administration of the Government. The participants in the protest were not allowed to set up their tents and were also stripped of the polyethylene sheets with which the women participating in the protest were protecting themselves with from the rain.