August 26, 2005
Russia: Rights Group Compares Current State Of Country's Prisons To Gulags
by Bruce Pannier
![]()
In a new report, a group of leading Russian rights activists is accusing authorities of ignoring systemic abuses and torture in the country's prisons. The nongovernmental movement For Human Rights compares the current prison system to the infamous gulags of the Soviet Union. The rights group is calling for new legislation allowing public oversight of detention facilities. The activists are also calling for the dismissal of the country’s top prison official.
Prague, 26 August 2005 (RFE/RL) -- For Human Rights says its report is based on the monitoring of prisons in some 40 out of Russia's 89 regions.
In an interview with RFE/RL, the group's executive director, Lev Ponomaryov, compares the situation in the country’s jails to the Soviet-era gulag system and draws a parallel to one of the most infamous prisoner abuse cases in recent history.
“Everything that happened at Abu Ghurayb [in Iraq] is widespread in Russian prisons, and therefore one could say that a gulag system has been created in Russia where people torture, beat, and murder [inmates],” Ponomaryov said.
Ponomaryov alleges that the policy at Russia’s prisons is increasingly to make the punishments more severe to morally and physically crush each convict. He charges that inmates are regularly humiliated and subjected to cruel treatment for no reason.