Arbitrary detention and alleged police ill-treatment
During the period under review opposition groups staged a number
of peaceful protests against President Lukashenka's refusal to hold
elections scheduled for July, questioning the legitimacy of his
tenure in office. The opposition staged a series of large-scale
demonstrations in July and October, as well as numerous smaller
protest actions, both in and outside Minsk, during which Amnesty
International learned of hundreds of arrests. In a series of public
statements Amnesty International condemned the arrests and considered
any demonstrators detained for peacefully exercising their freedom
of assembly as prisoners of conscience.
During the 'Freedom March' demonstration on 17 October a number
of prominent members of the opposition were arrested by the Belarusian
authorities. Leader of the Belarusian Social Democratic Party Nikolai
Statkevich, human rights activists and deputies of the dissolved
parliament Loudmila Gryaznova and Valery Schukin, chairman of the
human rights organization 'Spring-96' (Vesna-96) Ales Byalatsky,
current deputy chairman of the dissolved parliament Anatoly Lebedko
and chairman of the Belarusian Popular Front Vintsuk Vyachorka were
among around 200 protestors detained by the authorities. Most of
the aforementioned people were given administrative prison sentences
of between 10 and 15 days or fined. Criminal charges were later
brought against a number of them for their part in organizing and
participating in the demonstration. Their cases are expected to
come to trial in February 2000 and, if they are convicted, Amnesty
International will consider them prisoners of conscience.
Seventeen-year-old Yevgeny Aphnagel, 17-year-old Andrei Volobev,
18-year-old Anton Lazarev and university students Gleb Dogel and
German Sushkevich were among a number of young Belarusians who were
arrested and given administrative sentences after the Freedom March
demonstration. Yevgeny Aphnagel was reportedly acquitted of all
criminal charges on 29 November after having spent 15 days in administrative
detention and allegedly being beaten by police officers. Criminal
charges of 'malicious hooliganism' under Article 201 (2) of the
Belarusian Criminal Code have reportedly been brought against the
other young protestors, whose trials are also expected to commence
in February 2000. University students Gleb Dogel and German Sushkevich
have alleged they were ill-treated by police officials after their
arrests.
During a peaceful demonstration to mark Belarus' Day of Independence
on 27 July, a 20-year-old member of the Belarusian Popular Party's
Youth Front, Yevgeny Osinsky, was arrested and held on the charge
of 'malicious hooliganism' and taking part in an unsanctioned demonstration
(AI Index: EUR 49/24/99). He maintains he was ill-treated by police
officers who reportedly hit him in the stomach, kidneys and back.
He was released from prison on bail on 6 September after spending
around five weeks in detention. On 18 January 2000 a court ruled
that Yevgeny Osinsky, who works as an electrician, must pay 20 percent
of his wages for a period of two years as a form of 'corrective
labour' for allegedly resisting arrest. The charges originally brought
against him were dropped.
Possible "disappearances"
Amnesty International expressed serious concern for the safety
of prominent opposition leader and former Amnesty International
prisoner of conscience Viktor Gonchar and his companion Anatoly
Krasovsky, who failed to return home on 16 September. Viktor Gonchar,
head of the unofficial electoral committee and first deputy chairman
of the dissolved parliament, and his companion Anatoly Krasovsky
apparently ''disappeared'' three days before Viktor Gonchar was
due to give an extensive report about the political situation in
Belarus under President Lukashenka to members of the dissolved parliament.
In May another prominent member of the opposition and former Minister
of the Interior, Yury Zakharenko, also apparently "disappeared"
on the first day of the campaigns of the unofficial presidential
elections (AI Index: EUR 01/02/99).
These possible "disappearances" occurred at key political
moments and the Belarusian authorities have shown great reluctance
to investigate the cases. Instead, they have accused Belarus' opposition
of staging the "disappearances" for the purposes of seeking
international attention or have stated that the individuals concerned
have been sighted abroad. Since they went missing there has been
no reliable information about the whereabouts of the three men.
Prisoners of conscience
In March the former Prime Minister, Mikhail Chigir, was imprisoned
for his opposition activities. He had intended to stand as a presidential
candidate in the unofficial presidential elections scheduled for
May (AI Index: EUR 01/02/99). His arrest caused a great deal of
concern in the international community and there were numerous calls
for his release. He was charged with financial impropriety relating
to a position he held as head of a bank, a charge which he denied.
After eight months' imprisonment he was conditionally released at
the end of November and his case is currently being heard by a court
in Minsk. Amnesty International fears he may not receive a fair
trial.
Other members of the opposition remain imprisoned for their non-violent
political beliefs, including members of the dissolved parliament
Andrei Klimov and Vladimir Koudinov (AI Index: EUR 01/02/99). The
case of Andrei Klimov, who has been in pre-trial detention since
February 1998 charged with financial impropriety, eventually came
to court in July and continued throughout the year. On 13 December
Andrei Klimov was reportedly beaten and kicked by prison officials
and dragged into a Minsk courtroom in torn clothes and without shoes.
The ill-treatment allegedly occurred after Andrey Klimov refused
to leave his prison cell and go to court, protesting he has not
received a fair trial. It is anticipated that the court will reach
a verdict early in the year 2000.
Amnesty International learned of the release of 73-year-old Vasily
Starovoitov on 11 November after spending two years in prison convicted
of bribery and large-scale embezzlement in May1999 (AI Index: 01/01/99).
Amnesty International believes that the charges were politically
motivated and designed to silence an opponent of President Lukashenka.
Possible prisoners of conscience
Amnesty International expressed concern about the arrest of the
Rector of Gomel Medical Institute, Professor Yury Bandazhevsky,
in July, fearing he may have been deliberately targeted by the authorities
for exercising his right to freedom of expression, and considered
him a possible prisoner of conscience (AI Index: EUR 49/27/99).
He has openly criticized the way in which the Ministry of Health
has conducted research into the adverse health effects of the Chernobyl
nuclear reactor catastrophe of 1986 and the money it has spent on
such research.
Yury Bandazhevsky was arrested in Gomel in the middle of the night
of 13 July by a police detachment. In violation of international
human rights standards, the authorities did not formally charge
him until 5 August. The circumstances surrounding Yury Bandazhevsky's
arrest have caused further concern, since he was not given access
to a lawyer or allowed to see his family until three weeks after
his arrest. After the lawyer obtained permission to visit his client
in Gomel, Yury Bandazhevsky was transferred to a prison some 100
miles away in Mogilev without the lawyer's knowledge. On 27 December
he was released on the condition he does not leave Minsk and is
awaiting trial on charges of allegedly taking bribes from students
seeking admission to his research institute. If he is convicted,
he faces between five and 15 years' imprisonment and confiscation
of his property. Amnesty International fears that like Mikhail Chigir
and Andrei Klimov he may not receive a fair trial.
Persecution of human rights defenders
Several prominent human rights defenders and human rights organizations
came under increased pressure in 1999 to cease their human rights
work. The Minsk offices of the human rights organization 'Spring-96'
were raided on 4 October by the police. Police officers confiscated
computers, a printer and photocopier and copies of their human rights
journal Right to Freedom on the pretext that the organization did
not possess the necessary documentation to print on the premises.
The Belarusian Helsinki Committee was also subjected to continued
harassment by the authorities. In December they were threatened
with eviction from their offices, which are owned by the Presidential
Business Administration.
In July Oleg Volchek, the head of the legal advice centre Legal
Aid to the Population and head of a non-governmental committee which
has demanded an independent investigation into the possible ''disappearance''
of Yury Zakharenko, was charged under Article 201 (2) of the Belarusian
Criminal Code with ''malicious hooliganism'' (AI Index: EUR 49/24/99).
The charges related to his participation in a peaceful protest organized
by the opposition on 21 July, during which he was arrested and ill-treated
by police officers. Amnesty International expressed concern that
he had been deliberately targeted by the Belarusian authorities
to punish him for his opposition activities and to silence a vocal
member of the opposition. The organization learned that the charges
against him were dropped in late November. However, on 8 November
the Ministry of Justice reportedly revoked the license of the Legal
Aid to the Population advice centre, which permitted it to give
legal advice to the general public.
Amnesty International learned that charges against the human rights
lawyer Vera Stremkovskaya, under Article 128 (2) of the Belarusian
Criminal Code for allegedly slandering a public official, were also
dropped at the end of December (AI Index: EUR 01/02/99). The charges
carried up to five years' imprisonment and Amnesty International
informed the Belarusian authorities that if she were imprisoned
it would consider Vera Stremkovskaya a prisoner of conscience.
Harassment of journalists and the independent press
Several prominent independent newspapers critical of the government
had their registered status revoked. In other instances, independent
newspapers were closed down for alleged tax violations or after
losing expensive libel cases for criticizing senior government figures.
The independent newspapers, Narodnaya Volya, Naviny, Imya and Belorusskaya
Delovaya Gazeta came under particular pressure. The harassment of
the independent press aroused significant criticism abroad.
In July Irina Halip, editor of the independent newspaper Imya, was
arrested at the Belarusian headquarters of the Russian television
station, ORT, where she had been scheduled to give an interview
(AI Index: EUR 49/24/99). She was arrested on the charge that Imya
had slandered the Belarusian Prosecutor General, Oleg Bozhelko,
in a previous article. Irina Halip also had her travel documents
confiscated by the authorities after her arrest. She was due to
fly to the United States to attend meetings with fellow journalists
two days later. In a press release on 23 July Amnesty International
expressed the concern that the confiscation of her travel documents
was part of the government's crack-down on peaceful dissent and
to prevent her from talking about the political situation in the
country (AI Index: EUR 49/18/99). Amnesty International learned
several days later that the Belarusian authorities had eventually
allowed her to visit the United States as she had originally planned.
Although she was interviewed by the authorities on several occasions
after her release she had not been formally charged by the end of
the year.
Death penalty
The death penalty continued to be imposed frequently. In August
the Chairman of the Supreme Court of Belarus, Valyantsin Sukala,
told a news conference that 29 people had been executed in the first
seven months of 1999. There was continued concern about the veil
of secrecy surrounding the death penalty, about which information
is classed as a state secret. Even after a prisoner has been executed
the relatives are not informed of the date or place of execution.
In July the mother of Anton Bondarenko, who was under sentence of
death and whose appeal had failed, stated that the prison authorities
refused to inform her of the exact date when her son would be executed.
She had visited the prison where her son was being held every day
for several weeks to see if he was still alive. On 14 July she and
a friend staged a picket near the Presidential Administration building
to plead for Anton Bondarenko's sentence to be commuted. She was
arrested by police officers and detained for three hours. Her son
was executed 10 days later on 24 July.
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