Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 15 – Even though the
authorities had announced that Rashid Aushev and Khasan Katsiyev would be
released today, they waited until after working hours to do so apparently to
show their ability to act as they like and to complicate the lives of the
family and friends of the two Ingush prisoners.
But the two, having been convicted on
charges of attacking police during the protest last March and released on the basis
of time served in pre-trial detention, showed no remorse, pledged to appeal
their sentences, said they had been subject to psychological and physical
pressure, and called for the release of others, including Zarifa Sautiyeva.
They said that they had acted within
the law before in protesting Yunus-Bek Yevkurov’s giveaway of ten percent of the
republic’s territory to Chechnya and that they would continue to protest, again
within the law, against that and against the continued detention of other
Ingush activists (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/348378/).
Meanwhile, in an action that may
help some of the Ingush demonstrators still incarcerated, Amnesty International
called on the Kremlin to take immediate action to protect the more than 500,000
prisoners in the Russian Federation from the coronavirus and especially the
approximately 9,000 of them who are older than 60 (doshdu.com/amnesty-international-potrebovala-ot-rossijskih-vlastej-osvobodit-politzakljuchennyh-starshe-60-let-i-hronicheski-bolnyh/).
The international human rights
organization noted that it was especially concerned about the fate of “almost
97,000” people in Russia who are being held in preliminary detention, as most
of the Ingush under arrest are. It said that conditions in preliminary
detention facilities were especially threatening to the life and health of
inmates.
At the same time, Amnesty repeated
its call for freeing all prisoners of conscience in Russian prisons and
detention facilities, for allowing them to remain in house arrest until their
trials, and to have unimpeded access to their lawyers, doctors, and families
while under restrictions.
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