Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe
In late September the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe (PACE) considered the overall political situation in Belarus,
including its adherence to various civil and political rights. In
doing so, PACE rebuffed any notion that Belarus’ special guest status
in the Assembly would be restored, stating in Resolution 1306: "At
present, Belarus shows severe democratic deficits and it does not
yet meet the Council of Europe’s relevant standards. The electoral
process is imperfect, human rights violations continue, civil society
remains embryonic, the independence of the judiciary is doubtful,
local government is underdeveloped and, last but not least, Parliament
has limited powers."
Among PACE’s wider concerns were freedom of expression, including
press freedom, and the country’s unresolved "disappearances".
PACE stated: "[R]ecent developments in Belarus also give rise
to growing concern regarding freedom of expression and of the media.
The independent media continue to be subject to increasing pressure
and harassment from the Belarusian authorities. The recent convictions
of journalists for their opinions are unacceptable" (see below).
In this respect PACE called on the Belarusian authorities to reconsider
cases of imprisonment on political grounds, including those relating
to convicted journalists.
Echoing the concerns of various other international bodies PACE
stated that it was "... seriously concerned about the lack
of progress regarding the cases of missing people" and "[d]espite
assurances by the Belarusian authorities about ongoing investigations
into their cases no reliable information let alone any concrete
results are available at present". Resolution 1306, adopted
by PACE on 27 September, subsequently resulted in the establishment
of an investigative ad-hoc sub-committee of the Committee on Legal
Affairs and Human Rights to probe into the circumstances surrounding
the "disappearances". Member of the Russian Duma, Sergey
Kovalev, was appointed chairman of the ad-hoc sub-committee, which
reportedly met in September as well as in November to examine the
investigation conducted by the authorities into the "disappearances".
Freedom of expression
The authorities continued to resort heavily to the use of criminal
libel against journalists in order to curb the legitimate exercise
of the right to freedom of expression. On 16 September the editor
of the independent newspaper, Rabochy, Viktor Ivashkevich was sentenced
by a court in Minsk to a two-year term of "restricted freedom"
after being convicted of slandering the President in a newspaper
article in the pre-election period. The offending article accused
the administration of corruption. As a result of the sentence of
"restricted freedom" Viktor Ivashkevich will be subjected
to forced labour of the authorities’ choosing for the duration of
his sentence and will be forced to return to a guarded barracks
at a given time each evening. In mid-December he was sent to Baranavichy,
140km south-west of the capital Minsk, where he will serve his sentence.
Viktor Ivashkevich’s conviction followed the June 2002 convictions
of the Pagonia editor and staff writer Nikolai Markevich and Pavel
Mozheiko in Grodno, who were respectively sentenced to two-and-a-half
and two-year sentences of "restricted freedom", later
reduced by one year on appeal (see AI Index: EUR 01/007/2002). AI
considers all three journalists to be prisoners of conscience.
The frequent use of criminal libel against journalists in Belarus
resulted in expressions of domestic and international concern. Shortly
after Viktor Ivashkevich’s conviction, the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) Representative on Freedom of
the Media, Freimut Duve, in a press release urged "... the
Belarusian authorities to immediately cease its policy of criminal
prosecution and intimidation of independent journalists, and to
repeal the existing criminal laws on libel and defamation"
and called upon "...the authorities to abide by the commitments
to freedom of expression and freedom of the media that Belarus has
subscribed to as an OSCE participating State". In early September
the independent Belarusian Association of Journalists started a
national campaign to remove three articles from the Belarusian Criminal
Code which criminalize libel and insult. At the end of the year
several other individuals were reportedly being investigated on
suspicion of having libelled leading state officials, including
the prominent opposition journalist Irina Khalip.
Human rights defenders
Human rights defenders continued to be targeted by the authorities
for defending and promoting human rights. Like journalists, lawyers
were also not immune to prosecution on grounds of criminal libel.
Leninsky District Court in Minsk convicted the lawyer, Igor Aksenchik,
of criminal libel and sentenced him to an 18-month suspended prison
sentence on 11 October. Igor Aksenchik had represented the mother
of the missing television cameraman Dmitry Zavadsky during the in
camera trial of the four men accused of his abduction and murder
earlier in the year (see AI Index: EUR 49/13/2002). Leninsky District
Court convicted him of libelling a leading state official widely
believed to have been involved in the "disappearance"
of Dmitry Zavadsky by publicly naming him in a press interview in
February 2002. As a result of his conviction he was expelled from
the state-controlled bar association, Collegium of Advocates, from
which he had reportedly been suspended in March 2002, preventing
him practising a profession as a lawyer.
The prominent human rights lawyer and chairperson of the Human
Rights Center, Vera Stremkovskaya, came under renewed pressure from
the Belarusian authorities (see AI Index: 49/005/2001). She was
informed by Minsk Collegium of Advocates on 30 September that it
would not permit her to travel abroad in order to speak about human
rights issues in Belarus. Belarusian lawyers must seek official
permission from the Collegium of Advocates, of which membership
is mandatory, before embarking on foreign travel. At the time of
the refusal Vera Stremkovskaya intended to travel abroad in order
to take part in two international conferences on democracy and human
rights: in Brussels, Belgium on 10-11 October and Seoul, South Korea
on 11-14 November. She was later permitted to attend the conferences,
albeit only after lengthy negotiations on her behalf and interventions
by international lawyers’ and human rights groups. The decision
to prevent Vera Stremkovaksya from travelling appeared to have been
made shortly after she attended the OSCE’s annual Human Dimension
Implementation Meeting in Warsaw, Poland, in mid-September where
she had spoken negatively about the Collegium of Advocates and the
pressure it exerted on human rights lawyers.
Shortly afterwards, the Human Rights Center also appeared to be
targeted by the authorities. The Human Rights Center received an
official warning from the Justice Department of Minsk City Executive
Committee for various alleged violations of the Law on Public Associations.
Human rights organizations, like all other associations, are subject
to a system of official warning which can result in their closure.
In the past AI has expressed concern that warnings have been issued
for the most spurious of reasons and the overall system of warnings
has been used to unnecessarily regulate as well as harass and pressurize
human rights organizations (see AI Index: EUR 49/005/2001). In its
official warning to the Human Rights Center the Justice Department
of Minsk City Executive Committee stated, among other things, that
the organization had violated the Law on Public Associations by
using an organizational emblem on the plaque of its offices different
to the one officially registered by the organization.
Prisoner of conscience — Professor Yury Bandazhevsky
The health of prisoner of conscience Professor Yury Bandazhevsky
reportedly deteriorated in the period under review (see AI Index:
EUR 01/007/2002). Galina Bandazhevskaya, who visited her husband
in the UZ-15 labour colony in Minsk in early September, stated that
she witnessed a dramatic deterioration in Yury Bandazhevsky’s health
since her last visit three months previously. She believed that
he was suffering from severe depression. His condition was not said
to have improved by the time of her next prison visit in early November.
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