Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 16 -- Torture has
become “a routine practice” in today’s Russia, according to a detailed 69-page
report prepared jointly by the French Christian Association for the Abolition
of Torture, the Russian Committee Against Torture, and the Russian Public
Verdict Foundation.
The report, the text of which is at unmondetortionnaire.com/IMG/pdf/acat_russie_ru.pdf, was described by Grani.ru in an article that has
been reposted on several Russian human rights sites (grani.ru/tags/torture/m.221217.html
and pravo-ural.ru/2013/11/16/pravozashhitniki-pytki-stali-rutinnoj-praktikoj-v-rossii/).
According
to the authors, torture and other forms of harsh treatment are now used by
Russian police and security officer “at all stages of the criminal process,
from the moment of detention or arrest until the end of someone’s sentence in a
camp” or prison. And they thus now have a “systemic” character.
Moreover,
the report says, torture is applied regardless of what the individuals taken
into the system are suspected of, a situation that puts anyone regardless of
his or her behavior at risk. Using
torture thus helps the police boost their statistics on the solution of crimes,
even if those solutions are based on false confessions, and helps the
authorities keep the population in line.
With
regard to places of detention, the rights activists point to the “inhuman”
conditions under which prisoners are kept: excessively full cells, lack of
access to medical care, bad conditions of work and exercise, and in general the
way in which the jailers treat their prisoners.
In
certain regions and institutions of Russia, the situation with regard to
torture is especially bad. Chechens are especially ill-treated in this regard
not only in their own republic but when they are arrested elsewhere. Such treatment is typically justified by the authorities
as a necessary part of the counter-terrorist struggle.
The
situation has become so bad in that North Caucasus republic, the report says,
that its author have the impression that in that region, “the laws do not work
in principle.”
Those
who have been tortured and seek redress often are tortured again or charged
with additional crimes, especially if they are already serving time in prisons
or camps, where they are cut off from “any means of legal defense.” Outsiders who complain about this situation
often encounter “threats” from the authorities.
The
report concludes that this situation reflections problems with the Russian
legal code and with “the absolutely ineffective” application of legal norms to
the police and penal systems. The lack
of a clear definition of torture is “an obstacle” to requiring officials not to
do certain things and to bringing charges against them when they do.
And
the report concludes sadly that unfortunately, the number of people in the
Russian Federation who are actively struggling against the use of torture there
is small. There are a few human rights NGOs, but their activities have been
further constrained by the adoption of the new Russian law on “foreign agents.”
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