Possible ''disappearances''
The trial of two former members of the elite Almaz police unit
and two other men accused, among other crimes, of the abduction
and murder of the Russian Public Television (ORT) cameraman, Dmitry
Zavadsky, began at Minsk Regional Court on 24 October (see AI Index:
EUR 01/003/2001). In contravention of various international human
rights standards the trial was held behind closed doors. The authorities
offered no credible reason for this decision. Repeated requests
for access to the proceedings from domestic human rights organizations
were rejected. Human rights monitors stated that they suspected
high-level state involvement in the murder, an argument reinforced
by incriminating statements made by two officials assigned to the
case from the Prosecutor General's Office, who fled the country
in June and successfully obtained asylum in the US.
International and domestic observers argued that, although the
four accused men may have been involved in the murder, President
Alyaksandr Lukashenka's immediate circle of appointees had organized
this and other murders of prominent opposition figures. The attempts
of the Prosecutor General's Office to investigate this alleged involvement
resulted in the dismissal of several high-ranking state officials
in late November 2000, including Prosecutor General Oleg Bozhelko,
who was said to have interviewed suspects, who were later not brought
to trial (see AI Index: EUR 01/001/2001). Concern has also been
expressed that several or all of the accused will be convicted of
the charges and then quickly executed in order to eradicate any
evidence linking the President's administration to the crimes.
The presidential elections — continued harassment
and intimidation
Presidential elections were held on 9 September, returning President
Alyaksandr Lukashenka to power. The outcome of the elections was
disputed by Belarus' opposition as well as many foreign governments
due to serious doubts about their fairness. The International Limited
Election Observation Mission (ILEOM)ILEOM comprises the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights (OSCE/ODHIR) and the Parliamentary Troika of the
OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (OSCE/PA), the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe and the European Parliament. stated that
there were fundamental flaws in the electoral process including
''[a] political regime that is not accustomed to and does everything
in its power to block the opposition''; ''[a] campaign of intimidation
directed against opposition activists, domestic observation activists,
opposition and independent media, and a smear campaign against international
observers''; and ''[h]ighly biassed State-controlled media and censorship
against the independent print media''.OSCE/ODIHR Limited Election
Observation Mission - Final Report, Republic of Belarus Presidential
Election 9 September 2001 - page 3.
These sentiments were reflected in a pre-election period marred
by numerous accounts of arbitrary action on the part of the state,
aimed at stifling the peaceful activities of the opposition, including
the detention of human rights and pro-democracy activists and alleged
police ill-treatment. The offices of election-monitoring organizations
and independent newspapers were also targeted by the authorities
in various police and tax raids, resulting in confiscations of valuable
office equipment and election materials (see below).
A significant number of people who took an active part in the elections
as election campaigners or election monitors, or had staged peaceful
anti-government protests, suffered reprisals after polling day.
The prominent Belarusian human rights organization, Spring-96, stated
that peaceful anti-government protesters were fined or imprisoned
for their activities, while the involvement of college and university
students and workers resulted in expulsions and dismissals from
their respective places of learning and employment.
Harassment and intimidation of human rights defenders
and pro-democracy activists
During the run-up to the election various independent human rights
and pro-democracy oriented non-government organizations (NGOs) were
raided by the Belarusian authorities. At the start of September
five police officers reportedly attempted to forcibly enter the
press office of the Minsk-based human rights and pro-democracy organization,
Charter-97. The organization's equipment reportedly only narrowly
escaped being confiscated. Several weeks previously, around 20 state
officials raided the Minsk office of the Belarusian Voters Club
on 21 August, confiscating office equipment and materials. Officials
had previously visited the offices of this election monitoring organization
on 17 and 20 August demanding information about the equipment being
used in its office. On 8 and 9 August officers from the Committee
for State Security (KGB) raided an office being used by the GART
youth centre in Gomel, on the Belarusian-Ukrainian border, confiscating
office equipment and detaining several youth pro-democracy activists.
GART later became one of the first Belarusian NGOs to be prosecuted
with violation of presidential decree No 8, preventing foreign monetary
and non-monetary aid being used for a broad range of pro-democracy
activities (See AI Index: EUR 01/003/2001), when Gomel City Court
fined it one million Belarusian roubles (approximately $630) on
27 December. In the period under review several other NGOs suffered
the same fate.
In the run-up to polling day, Spring-96, received two official
warnings from the Ministry of Justice on 27 and 28 August, threatening
it with closure. Human rights organizations, like all other associations
in Belarus, are subject to a system of official warnings which can
result in their closure by the Ministry of Justice if two warnings
are received in any one year period. The Ministry of Justice accused
Spring-96 of distributing more than the regulationary maximum 299
copies of its publication Right to Freedom and of not supplying
the ministry with the organization's list of election observers.
AI has previously expressed concern that warnings are often issued
for the most spurious of reasons and are designed to harass human
rights defenders and restrict their activities (see AI Index: 49/005/2001).
No official action had been taken against the organization at the
end of the period under review.
Other organizations, like the Belarusian Students Association,
were less fortunate. The Belarusian Supreme Court ruled to close
this nationwide, independent association, which had been in existence
since 1992, on 3 December after it had received two official warnings
in June and September. The second warning, issued on 9 September,
ensued after officials discovered a minor inconsistency in the association's
official registration. The Belarusian Students Association considered
that the real reason behind its closure was the involvement of some
of its members in Belarus' pro-democracy movement.
Harassment and intimidation of the independent news
print media
Belarus' small independent printed news media was also repeatedly
targeted by the state authorities before and after the elections.
On 17 August the authorities seized 300,000 copies of a special
election issue of the independent newspaper, Nasha Svaboda, from
the Magic printing house due to alleged inaccuracies in the printing
house's financial records. On the same day Nasha Svaboda reportedly
received a warning from the State Press Committee for publishing
an article about members of President Lukashenka's government. Officials
raided the office of Belarus' largest independent newspaper, Narodnaya
Volya, on 23 August, reportedly confiscating 10 computers. The independent
newspapers, Nasha Svaboda and Belaruskaya Delovaya Gazeta were also
reportedly raided by officials the day previously. On 28 August
40, 000 copies of the newspaper, Rabochy, which favoured the main
opposition presidential candidate, Vladimir Goncharik, were seized
by state officials at the Magic printing house in Minsk.
The 4 September print-run of Grodno-based independent newspaper,
Pagonia, was also seized for containing a series of articles about
the possible falsification of the results of the presidential election.
The contents of the 4 September issue resulted in Grodno's Regional
Prosecutor's Office issuing the newspaper with an official warning
on 21 September for slandering President Lukashenka. As a result
of the warning and a warning the newspaper had received in November
2000, the Belarusian Supreme Economic Court closed Pagonia on 12
November. On 13 December Grodno's Leninsky District Court fined
the newspaper's editor, Nikolai Markevich, approximately $300 dollars
for taking part in an unsanctioned protest against Pagonia's closure
three weeks previously, during which he and two colleagues were
detained.
Prisoner of conscience
In the period under review AI received a letter of thanks from
the member of the dissolved Belarusian parliament, the 13th Supreme
Soviet, and prisoner of conscience Andrey Klimov, who remains imprisoned
in the UZ 15/1 colony in Minsk (see AI Index: EUR 49/14/00). Andrey
Klimov, who was sentenced to six years' imprisonment in March 2000
for alleged corruption, has served nearly four years of his sentence.
Expressions of international concern about his imprisonment persisted.
In mid-September the Inter-Parliamentary Union, which has closely
followed his case, stated during its 169th session in Ouagadougou,
Burkina Faso, that it ''[r]emains concerned at the continuing imprisonment
of Mr. Klimov, particularly in view of the serious misgivings it
has previously expressed about respect for the right to fair trial
and the right to defend oneself, and the harshness of the sentence
handed down on him, which it considers grossly disproportionate
to the alleged offence''.
Death penalty
On 10 December the Deputy Prosecutor General, Alyaksandr Ivanovsky,
reportedly stated that, in 2001, four prisoners were executed and
a further four sentenced to death. The figures given contrasted
with those offered by the Chairman of the Belarusian Supreme Court,
Valyantsin Sukala, who stated in early 2002 that seven people were
sentenced to death in 2001, five of whom were said to be waiting
execution.
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