Prisoners of conscience
Andrey Klimov, who was arrested on 11 February 1998 on charges
relating to his business interests, was sentenced to six years'
imprisonment at a hard labour colony with confiscation of property
on 17 March, after spending over two years in pre-trial detention
(see Belarus: Dissent and Impunity, AI Index: EUR 49/14/00). A representative
from AI was present at the Leninsky court in Minsk on 17 March when,
amid chaotic scenes, it passed final sentence on the 34-year-old
member of the dissolved parliament and political opponent of President
Lukashenka. Various international representatives, who were present
at the court hearing and had observed the trial, cast considerable
doubt on the fairness of the trial and the final court ruling. AI
believes that Andrey Klimov has been deliberately targeted by the
Belarusian authorities to punish him for his opposition activities
and considers him to be a prisoner of conscience.
The trial of the prominent opposition leader and the former Prime
Minister, Mikhail Chigir, who was imprisoned for 8 months in 1999
for his opposition activities, commenced at the end of January at
Minsk City Court, attracting considerable international and domestic
attention. The trial was attended by various representatives from
foreign embassies based in Minsk and from the OSCE (see Belarus:
Dissent and Impunity, AI Index: EUR 49/14/00). In the course of
an unfair trial the court reached its final verdict on 19 May when
it found Mikhail Chigir guilty of abuse of power relating to a position
he had held as head of a bank before becoming Prime Minister in
1994. The court sentenced him to three years in prison, two of which
were suspended, and fined him 200 000 dollars as compensation to
the state. Due to the period he had spent in pre-trial detention
he did not have to serve the outstanding one-year sentence. The
court also barred the 52-year-old former prisoner of conscience
from holding political office for a period of five years. As a result,
his participation in the planned elections in the years 2000 and
2001 could result in him serving the entire prison sentence. If
Mikhail Chigir is convicted and imprisoned in the future for his
non-violent political activities AI will consider him to be a prisoner
of conscience.
On 19 June Minsk City Court found the leader of the Belarusian
Social Democratic Party, Nikolai Statkevich, and a member of the
dissolved parliament and opposition activist, Valery Shchukin, guilty
of violating public order under Article 186-3 of the Belarusian
Criminal Code for their leading roles in organizing two demonstrations
in 1999. Both men served periods in administrative detention after
the demonstrations and AI considered them to be prisoners of conscience.
The court gave them two and one year suspended prison sentences
respectively. During the demonstrations on 27 July and 17 October
AI received numerous reports of arrests and allegations of police
ill-treatment (see AI Index: EUR 01/01/00).
Possible "disappearances" — related protest actions
On 3 March Leninsky Court in Minsk gave three protestors administrative
periods of detention of five days each for staging an unofficial
picket outside the presidential administration building in support
of former Minister of the Interior, Yury Zakharenko, and first deputy
chairman of the dissolved parliament, Viktor Gonchar, and his companion
Anatoly Krasovsky — all of whom appeared to disappear in 1999. The
whereabouts of the three men remains unknown. During the period
in prison one of the men, Timothy Dranchuk, was taken to hospital
reportedly suffering from concussion after being ill-treated by
an official.
Impunity
In May AI expressed concern about the continued intimidation of
former prisoner of conscience and victim of police ill-treatment,
Alyaksandr Shchurko, who has been seeking to obtain compensation
through the Belarusian courts. Forty-year-old Alyaksandr Shchurko,
who was detained during last October's pro-democracy Freedom March
in Minsk, was reportedly arrested and physically ill-treated along
with 10 other people on a police bus during a two-hour journey to
a detention centre by police officers from the special police unit,
the OMON (see Belarus: Dissent and Impunity, AI Index: EUR 49/14/00).
He subsequently spent five days in prison. He is suing the Belarusian
authorities for 100, 000 dollars in compensation. On 30 May, Moskovsky
Court in Minsk heard his complaint of ill-treatment. AI is informed
that no other victim of police ill-treatment has successfully taken
a complaint to this stage.
Alyaksandr Shchurko has alleged that as a result of his efforts
to secure redress he has been subjected to threats, including anonymous
telephone calls instructing him to terminate his complaints. One
of the police officers alleged to have ill-treated him reportedly
threatened him earlier in May saying that the street in Minsk where
he lives is very narrow and he should be careful when he returns
home at night. Alyaksandr Shchurko's 20-year-old son, who is studying
economics at a state institute, has reportedly began to score very
low marks after previously being a very good student. The two human
rights organizations involved in Alyaksandr Shchurko's efforts to
seek redress have also come under renewed pressure. The offices
of the Human Rights Center, which is headed by Alyaksandr Shchurko's
lawyer Vera Stremkovskaya, and the legal advice centre Legal Assistance
to the Population were both burgled in May, resulting in the loss
of valuable equipment and material.
Arbitrary detention and the alleged ill-treatment of demonstrators
AI received numerous reports of arrests during an unsanctioned
demonstration in Minsk on 25 March, which coincided with the anniversary
of the creation of the first Republic of Belarus in 1918 and to
protest against President Lukashenka. During the demonstration between
400 - 500 demonstrators were reportedly detained for several hours
by the police, who were patrolling the centre of Minsk in large
numbers. While around 200 detainees were reportedly held in a city
sports hall, others were held at various police stations and detention
centres. Most of the detainees were reportedly released between
two and three hours later.
AI has received reports that police officers used significant degrees
of force to detain some protestors. A number of people have complained
of being knocked to the ground, beaten with truncheons, kicked by
police officers and verbally abused. The deputy chairman of the
Conservative Christian Party of the Belarusian Popular Front, Yury
Belenki, has alleged that he and his companions were attacked by
a group of police officers on Yakub Kolas Square in Minsk during
which he was reportedly hit in the face with a truncheon, knocked
to his feet and repeatedly punched and kicked. He was then arrested
and held in detention for three days. The relevant persecutor's
office in Minsk has reportedly refused to investigate his allegations
of police ill-treatment.
At least 30 journalists covering the demonstration were also deliberately
targeted by the Belarusian authorities. This attempt to stem criticism
of the intolerance of dissent by the authorities prompted considerable
criticism both domestically and abroad. AI also learned of several
representatives of domestic human rights organizations who were
temporarily detained during the demonstration, such as Tatyana Protsko
from the Belarusian Helsinki Committee, Oleg Volchek from the legal
advice centre Legal Assistance to the Population, Valentin Stepanovich
and several of his colleagues from Spring-96.
In the aftermath of the demonstration several of the organizers
were detained for several days and some were later given periods
of administrative detention. On 30 March the deputy chairman of
the Belarusian Popular Front, Vyacheslav Sivchik, received a 10-day
prison sentence for his part in organizing the demonstration. The
vice chairman of the dissolved parliament, Anatoly Lebedko, was
reportedly arrested prior to the demonstration on 25 March and spent
two days in detention before being brought before a court on 27
March. His trial was postponed until 4 April when he was acquitted.
On 6 April the leader of the Belarusian Popular Front in Grodno,
Sergey Malchik, was sentenced to 10 days' administrative detention
for his part in organizing a demonstration in the town on 25 March.
Numerous other participants received warnings, fines and periods
of administrative detention from the courts in early April.
Prison conditions
AI has repeatedly expressed concern about conditions in prisons
and pre-trial detention centres which fall well below international
minimum standards and amount to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.
On 14 February the chairman of both the Belarusian Social Democratic
Party and Belarusian Helsinki Committee in Borisov (60km north-east
of Minsk), Alyaksandr Abramovich, was sentenced to 35 days in prison
for staging three unsanctioned demonstrations, one of them in protest
against the trial of former Prime Minister Mikhail Chigir. After
his release on 20 March he reportedly stated that the conditions
of his detention were humiliating. The cell was overcrowded and
poorly ventilated and prisoners were forced to sleep on wooden benches
without blankets and were denied exercise and access to showering
facilities and health care. On 22 May Alyaksandr Abramovich was
sentenced to a further 15 days' imprisonment for his opposition
activities.
Conscientious objection
In March AI expressed concern about the conviction of 21-year-old
Valentin Gulai, who as a practising Jehovah's Witness refused to
serve in the Belarusian army (see Belarus: Dissent and Impunity
AI Index: EUR 49/14/00). Military service is compulsory for all
males between the ages of 18 and 27 and lasts 18 months, except
for university graduates, who serve 12 months. There is currently
no alternative service at present for conscientious objectors to
military service. On 23 March Rechitsa regional court gave Valentin
Gulai, who had spent the previous month in prison, a suspended 18-month
prison sentence for refusing to perform military service, made conditional
on the basis that he spends the 18 months working on state construction
projects. However, on 26 May the Constitutional Court of Belarus
ruled that the constitution guarantees conscientious objectors the
right to a civilian alternative to military service and recommended
that steps be taken to ensure this right. Subsequently, Gomel Regional
Court overturned Valentin Gulai's original sentence reducing it
to a one year suspended sentence.
|