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Review-chronicle of human rights violations in
Belarus in September 2008
On 2 September the presentation of the report Incarceration
conditions in the Republic of Belarus, prepared by
the International Federation for Human Rights with the aid of the
Belarusian
human rights activists, took place in Minsk. The report was composed on
the
basis of an international research mission and is a valuable source of
information about the incarceration conditions in Belarus,
as there is almost no reliable information on this issue due to the
absence of
supervision over the penitentiary system in Belarus
by any national or
international agencies and institutions. During the presentation the
FIDH
secretary general Louis Peres welcomed the release of the last
political prisoners
by the Belarusian authorities, but stated that the situation of human
rights in
Belarus was still disturbing and the incarceration conditions in the
country
were extremely unsatisfactory and could be considered as forms of
inhumane
treatment, which is prohibited by the International Covenant on Civil
and
Political Rights and the UN Convention
against Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman
or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment.
On 28 September the elections to the Chamber of Representatives of the
National
Assembly of the Republic
of Belarus of the
fourth
convocation took place. The elections were accompanied by human rights
violations. The fundamental freedoms, such as the freedom of peaceful
assemblies and associations, remained considerably restricted. The
authorities
continued persecuting their opponents, which did not let to create an
atmosphere of trust and confidence. Despite numerous promises of the
officials
to hold free and democratic elections, the OSCE recommendations that
had been
made during the previous elections were not implemented. The Central
commission
for holding of elections and republican referenda refused to hold
negotiations
with representatives of the United democratic forces concerning the
improvement
of the conditions for the election campaign.
According to the official information, the turnout was 75,3% and all
110 MPs
were elected in the first vote. According to the head of the Central
election
commission Lidziya Yarmoshyna, about two billion rubles were saved as a
result.
These means will be mostly spend on bonuses to members of electoral
commissions. The list of the deputies voiced by Lidziya Yarmoshyna was
almost
the same to the list that had been sent to an independent newspaper Narodnaya Volia by an anonymous official
and published several days before the elections.
263 candidates participated in the electoral race. According to the
UDF, 66
representatives of the opposition were left during the last stage.
There were
no oppositional candidates in about 30 constituencies. Non-alternative
election
took place in 16 constituencies. After calculation of votes the Central
electoral commission received 24 complaints with the requirement to
find the
elections invalid. The results of the elections are disputed in 20
constituencies, but the CEC refused to consider the complaints and
forwarded
them to constituency electoral commissions.
Human rights activists conducted long-term monitoring of the election
at 86
constituencies. They conclude that the procedure of forming of
constituency and
precinct election commissions was performed with grave violations,
people were
forced to vote during the five days of early voting, the registration
of
candidates lacked transparency, the elections were closed and
correspond
neither to the standards of the Copenhagen OSCE document, nor to the
Belarusian
legislation. Violations of the rules during calculation of votes made
it
impossible for the observers to really watch this procedure and gives
reasons
for mistrust to the officially declared results.
Early voting started on 23 September. Among the typical violations on
this
stage, which were registered by members of the campaign Human
rights activists for free elections, there are
concealment of all kinds of information from domestic
observers by members of election commissions (for instance, the
observers were
not told the number of the ballots received by precinct commissions
from
constituency commissions, the number of the persons included in the
list of legally
registered voters and the turnout). On the first day of early voting at
some
precincts the ballot boxes were sealed without being examined by
members of
precinct election commissions.
Numerous cases of forced early voting were registered all over the
country at
enterprises and educational establishments. Printed calls to early
voting were
placed in shops, hairdressers’, saunas, etc and hostels. Besides, the
authorities consciously concealed it from the electors that according
to the
law the right to vote early could only be used if an elector had no
opportunity
to stay in his place of residence on the Election Day. Public and
political
activists were detained. Agitation materials were confiscated. On 23
September
Yury Dziadzinkin, a journalist for Narodnaya
Volia, was prohibited to make a photo at precinct #398 in Minsk. The
commission members referred to an
appropriate ruling of the head of the commission. Later the secretary
of the
Central election commission Mikalai Lazavik explained it with the
journalist’s
failure to establish good relations with the commission’s members.
Facts of
violence were registered as well. On 28 September at 8 p.m.
unidentified
persons beat Uladzimir Bazan, editor of the non-state newspaper Kurier iz Vitebska and an observer at
precinct #34 of Vitsebsk Kastrychnitskaya election constituency #20. An
independent candidate Andrei Levinau was also beaten in the porch of
his house.
Both cases took place in Vitsebsk.
The international observation mission of the OSCE concluded that the
Parliamentary elections in Belarus
did not correspond to the democratic standards and stated that there
were many
violations and falsifications. The USA did not recognize the
results
of the elections either. Only the mission of CIS observers declared the
elections in Belarus
free and democratic.
Oppositionists and independent observers declared that the results of
the
election were forged and the turnout was overrated. On 28 September a
peaceful
action of protest against the rigged elections took part in the center
of Minsk.
The minister of
interior Uladzimir Navumau called it a rude violation of law and order
and
threatened that a ‘legal evaluation’ would be given to it.
1. Fines and arrests
In September Kletsk district executive committee adopted ruling #886 On empowering the duty officials of Kletsk
district executive committee to compose reports of administrative
violations.
The local dwellers were warned about it by means of a publication in
the local
state newspaper Da Novykh Peramoh,
where it is written that from now on a special sheet with an official’s
name
and the numbers of articles on which he/she was empowered to impose
fines would
be inserted into his/her certificate. The workers of the district
executive
committee will also receive blanks for such reports.
By this ruling Kletsk district executive committee also obliges all
village
executive committees on the territory of Kletsk
district to
adopt similar rulings and empower their workers to fine their fellow
villagers:
for throwing litter in the streets, using foul language and insulting
the
officials during visits to their offices. The total number of ‘fine’
articles
is more than 45.
On 5 September Savetski district court of Minsk
punished a youth activist Vadzim Khaniauka with 15 days of arrest for
‘petty
hooliganism’. After his release from jail Vadzim told about the details
of his
detention. ‘As soon as I entered the garage where there were some
materials
related to the Boycott campaign, a
police car with riot policemen arrived. They must have been watching
me. They
knocked me down and started beating. Then they drove me to Savetski
district
police department and composed a false report,’ he said.
On 5 September the police also detained an activist of the Young
Front Dzianis Karnou. The police and KGB officers conducted a
search in his apartment. Some hours later Karnou was released from the
police
station.
On 13 September, during the official celebration of the City Day
activists of
the Young Front raised a
white-red-white flag in front of the eyes of the authorities. The
police seized
Andrei Tsianiuta, knocked him down and started beating him. As a result
he got
a knee injured and a finger dislocated. At the police station they drew
several
reports in which he was accused of dirty swearing and resistance to the
police.
Andrei spent the night in a small room, on a concrete floor. In the
morning he
demanded that a doctor was called. The medics diagnosed him with
pneumonia.
Nevertheless, the Young Front activist
was set free only after 15 hours.
In the night of 14-15 September the youth activists Mikhail Iliin and
Yauhen
Skrabets were detained for the Boycott! graffiti.
In the morning, after an expertise determined that the inflicted hard
did not
qualify for a criminal case, the police drew a report under article
17.1 (petty
hooliganism). Maskouski district court of Brest
punished the guys with five days of jail.
On 23 September Andrei
Tsianiuta was set down from a train to Minsk.
The police accused him of evasion from trial. Andrei was again locked
in an
isolation ward for the night. The following morning Chyhunachny
district court
of Homel sentenced Tsianiuta to seven days of jail and fined him
700 000
rubles (about $325).
On 29
September the
commission on affairs of minors of Salihorsk district executive
committee
considered the administrative cases against participants of a picket
against
the war in Georgia
that had
been conducted near the Russian Embassy in Minsk on 11 August. The action was
violently
dispersed by the police. The commission delivered a warning to
16-year-old
Illia Shyla and his elder brother Ivan was fined 875 000 rubles
(about
$400).
2. Tortures and other kinds of cruel and
inhumane treatment
On 1 September the police detained and beat Yana Paliakova, a member of
the
electoral team of a candidate Volha Kazulina. Three policemen guarded
her to
the police station, where the woman felt bad, after which an ambulance,
under
the police surveillance, guarded her to the hospital. The medics
registered
bodily injures on one hand and both legs. Yana Paliakova addressed the
procuracy with the request to hold a check-up concerning the abuse of
official
powers by the police officers.
On 7 September Yury Panasiuk, a member of the youth wing of the United
Civil
Party, told human rights activists about the illegal actions of
officers of
secret services including tortures. They approached him in the street
and one
of them hit him in the chest without saying anything. Two others seized
him by
the hands, handcuffed him and then threw on the back seat of their car.
Then
they started asking him about the explosion that had taken place in Minsk on 4 July.
Suddenly
one of them took out a knife. Trying to protect himself from it,
Panasiuk cut
two fingers on the left hand. He was hit in the head several times and
then was
thrown out of the car. Yury considers it as an attempt to intimidate
youth
activists.
3. Freedom of expression and the right
to disseminate information
On 9 September Iuyue district court considered the suit of the head of
Hrodna
oblast KGB office I.Siarhiyenka, in which he demanded that issue #127
of an
independent newspaper Svaboda (14-27
August 2008) was confessed extremist. Judge A.Toustsik agreed that the
newspaper contained materials that propagated extremist activities and
genocide
of the Osetian people by the Georgian authorities, and ruled that the
whole
circulation of the newspaper which had been detained on 19 August had
to be
destroyed. It was the first of a number of similar trials concerning
‘extremist
materials, which were started on the initiative of Hrodna KGB office.
On 18 September a preliminary meeting of sides on the civil case On confessing of informational materials as
extremist took place at Kastrychnitski district court of Hrodna.
The case
was brought on the initiative of Hrodna oblast KGB department. As it
was found
at the trial, nine persons from whom ‘potential extremist’ production
had been
confiscated during the recent years were defendants in the case: Barys
Haretski, member of the United Civil Party Uladzimir Laryn, Zmitser
Malchyk, Yury
Martsinovich, journalist Andzhei Pisalnik, human rights activist Valer
Shchukin, Yauhen Skrabutan, Aliaksei Trubkin and Stanislau Yodka. Among
the ‘extremist
materials’ there is also the Review-chronicle of Human Rights
Violations in Belarus
in 2004
(prepared by HRC Viasna) which was
confiscated by the customs officers from Aliaksei Trubkin. According to
the
court verdict, the book ‘contains a considerable number of photos from
mass
unauthorized protest actions in the Republic of Belarus (Freedom
Day, Chernobyl Way,
Dziady) and anti-Belarusian
direction, and materials with traits of calls to seizure of state power
in a
non-Constitutional way and organization of mass riot’.
Only three out of nine defendants came to the court. After a separate
talk with
each of them the judge Alexander Sitsko said that that case would be
consider
in October. No journalists and human rights activists were allowed to
be
present during the ‘conversations’.
On 11 September unidentified persons robbed a distributor of
independent press
Barys Khamaida. Several hundreds of copies of the newspapers Narodnaya Volia, Nasha Niva and Kurier iz
Vitebska, five copies of the Arche magazine
and five copies of Selection of Lukashenka’s quotations by Uladzimir
Padhol
were stolen from a friend’s garage, where Khamaida stored it all. He
thinks
that most probably the thieves picked up a key, as the lock was not
broken.
Barys Khamaida thinks that this theft is not occasional and is
connected with
the parliamentary elections.
On 15 September judge of Pukhavichy district court Liliya Rukhlevich
rejected
the suit of the dwellers of settlement of Druzhny against Pukhavichy
district
executive committee. By this verdict the citizens are prohibited to
familiarize
with documents of Pukhavichy district executive committee related to
the
planned construction of a chemical plant by a Russian private company Avgust-Bel. ‘Apart from ecological
information these documents witness that the local population protests
against
construction of this plant. That’s why it very necessary for us to
receive
them. We are trying to prove that the people expressed their negative
attitude
to such plans, and that the authorities lie about it,’ said Nastassia
Rysiavets. According to her, on 3 September Pukhavichy district court
held a
preliminary meeting with the plaintiffs. On 10 September the court
requested
from Pukhavichy DEC documents concerning construction of the plant, but
on 12
September only the judge and the prosecutor familiarized with them.
On 14 September a Young Front activist
Andrei Tychyna was detained at the central market of Salihorsk for
distribution
of an independent newspaper Svabodny
Salihorsk. The police handcuffed him and guarded to the police
station.
There 40 copies of the newspaper were confiscated from him and an
appropriate
report was composed. In an hour the youngster was let go.
4.
Right to peaceful assemblies
On 12 September the vice-head of the Young
Front Nasta Palazhanka addressed Minsk city executive committee
with the
request to authorize a picket, which the opposition intended to hold on
28
September in Kastrychnitskaya Square in order to inform the Belarusian
society
about falsifications and repressions during the electoral farce. The
city’s
authorities answered with a refusal. Moreover, on the eve of the action
its
organizers were called to the police and procuracy, one by one. All of
them
were warned about possible criminal punishment.
On 15 September activists of Polatsk branch of the Young
Front were refused in authorization of the picket Boycott
2008, which they intended to
hold on 20 September. The official reason for the refusal is that a
children’s
movie would be shown in the nearest cinema and the action could hinder
watching
it. ‘It is an evident law violation, that’s why we have already applied
Polatsk
town executive committee, the procuracy, the local election commission
and the
Central election commission’, stated an activist of the Young
Front Ales Krutkin. Bear in mind that several days before it
the secretary of the Central election commission Mikalai Lazavik said
that it
was not prohibited to agitate for boycott of the parliamentary
elections.
The authorities of Barysau banned a festival of Christian music,
organized by
representatives of Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant confessions. About
a
hundred of musicians and singers from different parts of Belarus
were to
have taken part in it. The festival was to have lasted from 16 to 21
September.
About 1,5 thousand people gathered for the action. However, ten minutes
prior
to its beginning a representative of the ideological department of
Barysau
stated that the permission for holding the action ‘lost its legal
force’ and
the festival was prohibited. She explained that the organizers did not
agree
the program of the festival with the authorities. They also allegedly
did not
solve the security issues and did not organize the cleaning of the
territory
after its end.
5. Right to association
On 30 September Rechytsa district court started considering
the preliminary
suit of the independent Belarusian trade union of radio electronic
industry
against Rechytsa district executive committee concerning the refusal of
the
latter to register a district trade union unit. Judge Anatol
Strelchanka
requested the appropriate documents confirming the admission of new
members to
the trade union and the legality of the creation of the territorial
unit. It is
expected that several members of the trade union will be summonsed to
the next
court sitting and that the court will deliver its verdict on 6 October.
By the way, it is already the second trial in Rechytsa concerning
non-registration of new units of the trade union by the local
authorities. In
summer the same judge rejected a similar suit of the trade union. He
stated
that it was an argument of two subjects of economy and it was not in
his powers
to consider such cases.
6. Politically motivated dismissals from
work and expulsions from high schools
In the beginning of September a first-year student Rastsislau
Pankratau was
expelled from Mahiliou
State University.
The official reason is poor academic progress, but the activist
considers it as
revenge for his public and political activities. Before being expelled,
he was
many times visited by KGB officers, who threatened him with expulsion.
A member of the Belarusian Christian Democracy Tatsiana Shambalava, who
participated in the electoral campaign as a pretender for candidate
from the
United democratic forces, was also expelled from Mahiliou State
University.
An activist of the Young Front Mikola
Dzemidzenka was expelled from Polatsk State University. Before the
expulsion he
was several times detained by the police for distribution of agitation
materials and Boycott stickers.
Katsus Zhukouski, Homel coordinator of the organizing committee of the
Belarusian Christian Democracy Party, was fired after a visit of
unidentified
persons to the director of his enterprise. After a conversation with
them the
director advised Zhukouski to revoke the application for registration
of his
initiative group. The activist refused. Then the director told him to
write an
application for quitting on his own will. The head of Zhukouski’s
initiative
group Alexander Sivakou was also fired after his boss advised him to
stop his
electoral activities.
On 29 September the administration of the Central clinical hospital,
where Ivan
Bedka, head of the electoral headquarters of an oppositional candidate
Ivan
Sheha, was working as an orderly, broke the working contract with him
before
the expiry of the contract term. No explanations were offered to Bedka.
An hour
was left for Bedka to his pension. ‘I am going to appeal against the
dismissal
in court, as employment contracts can be stopped when at least three
years are
left to pension’, said the activist.
7. Freedom of consciousness
In the evening of 10 September, during a regular prayer for
returning of
the building of Minsk St. Joseph church to the believers, the head of a
department of the Committee on national and religious affairs Alexander
Kalinau
met with the people. He promised that the temple would be returned to
the
believers and called them to stop the termless fast by which they tried
to get
the building returned.
8. Capital punishment
In 2008 in
Belarus
only one person was sentenced to death. It was stated by the head of
the
Supreme Court Valiantsin Sukala at the press-conference in Minsk on 9
September. According to the
official, this number witnesses that death penalty is used very rarely
and
there is almost a moratorium on it. He also pointed that the
introduction of
such a moratorium was in the competency of the president and the
legislative
authorities, but the judges are psychologically ready to it. ‘On the
other
hand’, Sukala stated, ‘we mustn’t forget about the results of
referendum 1996,
at which the majority of citizens of Belarus supported the use
of
capital punishment’.
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