LONDON,
October 29 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Torture, rapes and
“disappearances” are common in Russia’s legal “climate of
impunity,” international human rights group Amnesty International
charged in a report published Tuesday, October 29.
Drafted
last June, the report’s publication coincides with a major campaign by
Amnesty to highlight the discrepancy between the human rights protection
enshrined under international and Russian law and the reality of
widespread abuse, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
The
125-page report, entitled “Russian Federation: denial of justice,”
focuses on “specific and serious violations of international human
rights and humanitarian law by Russian law enforcement and security
forces.”
In
Russia there is a “reality of widespread human rights abuses committed
by agents of the state and private individuals or groups (non-state
actors) in a climate of impunity,” the report said.
Ethnic
minorities, particularly Chechens, “have been stereotyped by Russian
law enforcement officials as terrorists, drug dealers or other types of
criminal,” said the report, which contained a long section on human
rights violations in Chechnya.
“Amnesty
International has actively researched numerous, consistent and credible
reports that Russian forces (in Chechnya) have been responsible for
widespread human rights violations such as ‘disappearances’,
extrajudicial executions and torture, including rape,” the report
said.
The
report cited three examples of Russian human rights violations in
Chechnya.
Eighteen-year-old
Kheda (Elza) Kungaeva was abducted from her home in the village of
Tangi-Chu on the night of 26 March 2000 by Russian soldiers under the
command of Colonel Yury Budanov.
Colonel
Budanov confessed to killing Kheda Kungaeva, but alleged that he did so
in a “state of temporary insanity.” The prosecution has ignored
evidence that Kheda Kungaeva was raped before her death.
Colonel
Budanov was charged with homicide, kidnapping and abuse of power and was
the first Russian officer to be tried for crimes against civilians in
Chechnya since the renewed conflict began in 1999.
His
trial, which started in February 2001, was still continuing at the time
of writing.
Hundreds
of people, including a 90-year-old man and several children, were
detained by Russian soldiers during a raid on the town of Sernovodsk
near the border with Ingushetia on 2 July 2001.
Many
of those detained said that they were tortured or ill-treated; some said
that the soldiers subjected them to electric shocks and set attack dogs
on them.
Most
were released later that night, but about a hundred people were taken to
a temporary detention facility. The fate and whereabouts of at least six
people remain unknown.
On
August 1, 2000, Russian soldiers came to Rebaat Vakhaeva’s home in
Urus-Martan. They took her 25-year-old son, Kazbek Vakhaev, to the
“Internat” detention facility.
Rebaat
Vakhaeva visited the facility every day to bring food and clothes for
her son. Other prisoners told her that her son had been tortured during
interrogation. On August 13, she was told that her son was no longer
there.
On
August 21, Kazbek Vakhaev’s decapitated body was found in the village
of Goiskoe. Officials from the local procurator’s office said that
Kazbek Vakhaev had been kidnapped after his release on August 14.
The
investigation into his death was reportedly closed because investigators
could not establish who had detained or kidnapped him. Rebaat Vakhaeva
is still waiting for justice; those responsible for her son’s death
have yet to be held to account.
“Throughout
the Russian Federation, the torture or ill-treatment of women, men and
children in custody is virtually routine,” said Amnesty’s report.
Amnesty
made an appeal to the international community to condemn the human
rights abuses committed by Russian forces in Chechnya.
Some
300,000 people, the majority of them women and children, have fled their
homes in Chechnya to escape the fighting.
As
at mid-2002, approximately 160,000 remained in temporary accommodation
and in camps for internally displaced people, the majority in
neighboring Ingushetia, where they faced severe overcrowding and harsh
conditions.
They
have also come under pressure from the Russian authorities to return
home whether or not it is safe for them to do so.
Most
people who are detained by Russian forces are picked up during identity
checks on civilian convoys traveling from Chechnya to Ingushetia or
during military raids on populated areas.
Some
military units reportedly black out the number plates or other
identifying information on their vehicles during raids.
Detainees
have been held in facilities that sometimes amount to little more than
pits in the ground.
They
are denied access to relatives, lawyers and the outside world. Survivors
have said that torture is routine and systematic.
They
have reported the rape of male and female detainees, beatings with
hammers and clubs, electro-shock torture and exposure to tear gas.
The
Russian authorities have proved very reluctant to provide information on
the number of investigations and prosecutions.
However,
investigations into allegations of extrajudicial execution,
“disappearances”, torture and ill-treatment are rare.
Those
investigations that do take place are usually inadequate and hardly ever
result in those responsible being prosecuted.
Far
from holding the perpetrators to account, the Russian authorities are
reportedly redeploying units widely believed to have been involved in
human rights violations back to Chechnya for further tours of service.
Many
Chechens remain deeply suspicious of the Russian authorities and have
little faith that any complaint they bring will result in a prosecution.
Many fear that making a complaint could expose them to further human
rights violations, Amnesty said.
The
Russian authorities have failed to take appropriate steps to counter
this climate of fear and to encourage the victims of human rights
violations to come forward and register complaints.
International criticism of human rights violations and breaches of
international humanitarian law in Chechnya has often been muted,
especially following the 11 September 2001 attacks in the U.S. and the
subsequent U.S.-led military intervention in Afghanistan, which was
supported by the Russian government.
The
Russian authorities have ignored their obligation to bring those
responsible for human rights abuses to justice and to provide the
victims with an effective remedy, the report said.
It
is time that the Russian Federation took steps to turn its paper
commitments to human rights and justice into a reality.
Nearly
one million men, women and children are imprisoned in Russia, according
to the Amnesty report.
Among
them, nearly 200,000 are still waiting to be judged.
“Conditions
in the country’s disease-ridden and overcrowded pre-trial detention
centers are generally so appalling that they amount to cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment,” the report said.
Women
and children do not escape the mistreatment, according to Amnesty.
Women
arrested by police are often tortured and sometimes raped, the report
said, adding that children are often deprived of the most basic
necessities.
“Children
in Russia are routinely deprived of their liberty for months or even
years in pre-trial detention and sentenced to long terms of imprisonment
for relatively minor offences,” the report said