The United Nations (UN) Commission on Human Rights
The UN Commission on Human Rights expressed concern about the human
rights situation in Belarus at its 54th session in Geneva. Resolution
2003/14, adopted by the UN Commission on Human Rights on 17 April,
expressed deep concern about a number of issues, including "credible
sources — implicating senior government officials of the Government
of Belarus in the forced disappearance and/or summary execution
of three political opponents of the incumbent authorities and of
a journalist" and reports of arbitrary arrest and detention.
It also expressed deep concern about persistent reports of harassment
of non-governmental organizations (NGOs), opposition political parties
and individuals engaged in opposition activities and the independent
media. The UN Commission urged Belarus to address these concerns
by investigating fully and impartially all cases of forced "disappearance",
summary execution and torture (see below) and by bringing the actions
of the police into conformity with Belarus’ international human
rights obligations. It also urged Belarus to establish the independence
of the judiciary and end impunity, release journalists and other
individuals imprisoned for politically motivated reasons, and cease
the harassment of NGOs and political parties.
"Disappearances"
In the face of widespread international criticism that Belarus
has failed to investigate the "disappearances" of three
opposition figures and a journalist the Belarusian authorities took
the unprecedented step of discontinuing criminal investigations
into all four cases (See AI Index: EUR 49/013/2002). On 22 January
the relatives of Yury Zakharenko, Viktor Gonchar and Anatoly Krasovsky
were informed of the decision by officials heading the investigation
into the "disappearances". No reason was reportedly given
for the decision. A delegation of the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) Parliamentary Assembly Working
Group, which visited Minsk from 5 to 7 February, stated that it
was "unhappy to learn that the investigations into the cases
of disappeared politicians have been suspended". Similarly,
on 27 February Svetlana Zavadskaya, the wife of the missing journalist,
Dmitry Zavadsky, learned that the investigation into her husband’s
"disappearance" had been terminated, reportedly on the
basis that the authorities "had been unable to locate him".
The families of the men immediately appealed against the decisions,
albeit unsuccessfully by the end of June.
Press freedom
During its January part-session the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe adopted Recommendation 1589 (2003) Freedom of
expression in the media in Europe. Belarus featured repeatedly in
Recommendation 1589 as an example of a country where press freedom
is frequently violated. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe has repeatedly expressed concern about this and other
human rights related issues in the country (see AI Index: EUR 01/002/2003).
The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe expressed concern
about various forms of legal harassment, such as defamation suits
or disproportionately high fines which "bring media outlets
to the brink of extinction". Belarus was among several countries
cited by the Parliamentary Assembly as examples where such practices
exist. It urged member states to stop immediately all forms of legal
and economic harassment of dissenting media, a problem which assumed
disturbing proportions in Belarus in the first half of 2003 and
resulted in the closure of several independent newspapers.
One of Belarus’ largest regional independent weekly newspapers,
Novaya Gazeta Smorgoni, located in the western Belarusian town of
Smorgon, was forced to close on 3 February after Grodno Regional
Economic Court suspended for three months the business license of
its owner, Romuald Ulan. The latter had reportedly been summoned
to court in late December 2002 after local government officials
had filed complaints against him for violating various tax, fire
and employment regulations. The newspaper, which had been critical
of local government, had in the past reportedly experienced other
forms of harassment from local officialdom. By the end of June Romuald
Ulan’s right to engage in economic activities had not been reinstated.
The system of official warnings, administered by the Ministry of
Information and issued for the most spurious of reasons, was also
regularly employed in the period under review to keep in check Belarus’
independent press. It was reported that the satirical weekly newspaper
Navinki received two official warnings from the Ministry of Information
on 21 and 22 May and was thereafter suspended for a three-month
period. One of the warnings was reportedly issued after the newspaper
had printed a caricature of President Alyaksandr Lukashenka earlier
in the year. The editor of Navinki, Pavel Kanavalchyk, was fined
the equivalent of US$700 by Moskovsky District Court in Minsk on
20 May for publishing the offending caricature.
One of the highest profile newspapers forced to close by the authorities
was the Minsk-based Belaruskaya Delovaya Gazeta. On 29 May Belaruskaya
Delovaya Gazeta and its monthly supplement, Dlya Sluzebnogo Polzovania,
were forced to close for three months after receiving three warnings
from the authorities for alleged violations of the press law. The
newspapers were alleged to have slandered President Alyaksandr Lukashenka
and have reportedly commented on the ongoing trials of several businessmen
in a series of articles. The OSCE’s Representative on Freedom of
the Media requested urgent clarification for the closure of the
newspapers on 30 May, stating "... no special protection should
be afforded to public officials, including the president ... Conversely,
public officials should learn to exercise a greater level of tolerance
to criticism, including from the media, than ordinary citizens."
In early June Belaruskaya Delovaya Gazeta successfully appeared
under the mastheads of the newspapers Ekho and Salidarnasts, albeit
only for two issues until the authorities stopped the newspapers
going to print. As a result Ekho was suspended by the authorities
for three months, while the director of the Chyrvonaya Zorka publishing
house, which had printed the newspapers, was dismissed from his
post. Disturbingly, a fifth independent newspaper, Predprini-matelskaya
Gazeta, received a second official warning from the Ministry of
Information in late June and was suspended for three months after
reportedly printing an article about the dismissal of the director
of the Chyrvonaya Zorka publishing house, Vladimir Tselesh.
Prisoners of conscience
On 4 March a court in Asipovichy ruled that convicted Pagonia editor
Nikolai Markevich could return to his home town of Grodno, located
on Belarus’ western border with Poland. He had approximately one
year remaining of an 18-month sentence of "restricted freedom".
The ruling was made on the condition that Nikolai Markevich pays
15 per cent of his income to the state. Similarly, on 21 March a
court in Zhlobin ruled that Pagonia staff writer Pavel Mozheiko
also be allowed to return to Grodno. He had served approximately
six months of a 12-month sentence of "restricted freedom".
Both men had been convicted by a court in Grodno of slandering President
Alyaksandr Lukashenka in June 2002 (see AI Index: EUR 01/002/2003).
At the end of June a third journalist, editor of the newspaper
Rabochy Viktor Ivashkevich, remained in detention in Baranavichy,
140km south-west of the capital Minsk. He was sentenced in September
2002 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 in 2001. Earlier
in June 2003, however, his two-year sentence of "restricted
freedom" was reduced by one year, bringing forward the date
of his release to 16 December 2003.
Recommendation 1589 (2003) of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe urged the release of all three men (see above).
It stated that it was "unacceptable in a democracy that journalists
be sent to prison for their work" and urged Belarus to "free
all journalists imprisoned for their legitimate professional work
and to abolish legislation that makes journalistic freedom of expression
subject to criminal prosecution". Belarus’ human rights community
has repeatedly called for the removal of the relevant articles from
the Belarusian Criminal Code which criminalize libel and insult.
Detention of protestors
The Belarusian authorities continued to resort to repressive measures
to stifle peaceful protest and numerous people were deprived of
their liberty solely for exercising their rights to freedom of expression
and assembly. In January and February detentions occurred sporadically
in Minsk and Belarus’ regions resulting in peaceful protestors serving
prison sentences of between two and 10 days for participating in
unsanctioned meetings and demonstrations.
The month of March, however, saw a concerted large-scale clamp-down
by the Belarusian authorities on peaceful protest. The year's first
large-scale protest action, "People's March: For Better Life",
took place in Minsk on 12 March and resulted in a wave of arrests.
The organizers of the demonstration - former Deputy Foreign Minister
Andrei Sannikov, Charter-97 human rights activists Ludmila Gryaznova
and Dmitry Bondarenko, and small business leader Leonid Malakhov
- were subsequently sentenced to 15 days' imprisonment later the
same day. A fifth person, Valery Levanevsky, was convicted and sentenced
to 15 days’ imprisonment for his participation in the protest action
on 2 April. Vice-Chairman of the Belarusian Popular Front, Yury
Khadyka, also served a 15-day prison sentence in mid-June for his
role in the demonstration. Amnesty International considered all
six protestors to be prisoners of conscience.
At least 50 peaceful protestors were detained in Minsk city centre
on 23 March during an unsanctioned demonstration staged to protest
against President Alyaksandr Lukashenka's government and to coincide
with the 85th anniversary of the creation of the first Republic
of Belarus. Although a sizeable number of the detainees were released
later the same day, 14 demonstrators were reportedly detained overnight
at the notoriously bleak Okrestina detention facility in Minsk.
On 24 March Leninsky District Court in Minsk sentenced 11 demonstrators
to periods of imprisonment between three and 15 days. Another participant
received a seven-day sentence on 27 March for his part in the protest
action.
On 25 March more peaceful protestors were detained during an unofficial
demonstration in Minsk. Sovetsky District Court sentenced eight
of the participants to periods of imprisonment of between five and
15 days on 26 March. A significant number of the detainees belonged
to the ZUBR youth human rights and pro-democracy movement. The Belarusian
human rights organization, Spring-96, calculated that as a result
of the demonstrations on 12, 23 and 25 March at least 24 demonstrators
had been imprisoned, while six were fined and eight warned.
Death penalty
On 13 May the UN Human Rights Committee announced two rulings on
individual complaints of violations under the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). In the cases Bondarenko v.
Belarus and Lyashkevich v. Belarus the mothers of two men, who had
been executed after being convicted of murder, alleged that their
sons had been executed in secret and no information was provided
to them on either the time of the executions or on the location
of the burial site of their sons. One of the men, Anton Bondarenko,
who was executed on 24 July 1999, had been the subject of Amnesty
International urgent membership action (see AI Index: POL 10/01/00).
The Human Rights Committee ruled that the secrecy surrounding the
date of execution and the place of burial, and the refusal to hand
over the bodies for burial "had the effect of intimidating
or punishing families intentionally leaving them in a state of uncertainty
and mental distress" and amounted to inhuman treatment of the
families, in violation of Article 7 of the ICCPR.
On 17 April the Chairman of the Belarusian Constitutional Court,
Gigory Vasilevich, reportedly stated that Belarus’ population was
not yet ready to accept the abolition of the death penalty, even
though he personally regarded abolition as inevitable. He was quoted
by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting as stating: "Abolition
of capital punishment is inevitable. This is underpinned by the
country's desire to join the Council of Europe." The latter
body has repeatedly informed Belarus that a moratorium on the death
penalty is one of several preconditions for the reinstatement of
Belarus’ guest status at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe.
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