Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 23 – In yet
another disturbing development, one that recalls the idea of putting the fox in
charge of guarding the chicken coop, the Russian body established in the 1990s
to allow the public to monitor prisons has dropped human rights activists and
installed instead Dmitry Komnov, boss of the Butyrka prison when Sergey
Magnitsky died in custody.
Komnov was removed from that
position when it became obvious that Magnitsky had succumbed because the Russian
authorities had not provided him the medical care he needed. The former jailor figures
on the US Magnitsky List. But now he is making a comeback in Putin’s Moscow (meduza.io/feature/2016/10/23/vmesto-pravozaschitnikov-byvshiy-nachalnik-butyrki).
Not only is this a display of
contempt by the Kremlin for Russia’s already hard-pressed human rights
community and a guarantee that conditions in Russia’s penal institutions will
become even worse, but it is a slap at the United States and other Western
countries who have called attention to the Magnitsky case as a measure of
official malfeasance in Russia today.
The Russian prison monitoring body
has the right “to visit places of forced incarceration, to speak with
prisoners, to take part in the discussion about moving convicts. [It] also
considers appeals about the violation of human rights [in Russian prisons and
camps] and can appeal to organs of power, social organizations and the media.”
Despite restrictions, it has
achieved a great deal. But one can only imagine the role it will play without
the human rights activists who had been on this body and with the presence of
the notorious former jailor in their stead.
Russian human rights activists are
already calling this development the destruction of penal oversight. Valery Borshchev, the author of the law on
public supervision of the penal system, told “Novaya gazeta” that Komnov’s appointment
was part of “a special operation for the destruction of public supervision” of
Russia’s penal system (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2016/10/22/70270-smotryaschie-ot-onk).
Eva Merkacheva, a commentator for “Moskovsky
komsomolets,” posted on her Facebook page that as a result of this decision, “there
will be bodies, there will be tortures, there will be much grief and tears” because
there won’t be any “real defense of human rights.” She expressed the hope that Komnov’s election
would be revisited (facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1361546417222851&set=a.405558146155021.99755.100001025171767&type=3&theater).
And Anna Karetnikova, a longtime
human rights activist, asked on her Facebook account whether this constituted a
declaration of war by the regime against prisoners. “Who took this decision?
Who benefits?” She called on journalists to focus on this because “now
everything depends only on you” (acebook.com/akaretnikova/posts/1151815054894319).
No comments:
Post a Comment