Tuesday, February 14, 2012


Russia

Rights Court Condemns Russia Over Chechen's Death

Jean-Paul Costa (file photo) (AFP)

May 10, 2007 -- The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that Russia is responsible for the death of a Chechen man.

TEXT SIZE - +

The Strasbourg-based court said Russian responsibility for the death of Shamil Said-Khasanovich Akhmadov had been established "beyond all reasonable doubt," and ordered Russia to pay 62,285 euros in damages to his family.


Akhmadov was detained on March 2001 during a raid by Russian forces outside the Chechen capital, Grozny.


His body was found in a field in April 2002 with signs of violent death.


Today's ruling is the latest of several by the court against Russia in cases connected to the deaths of Chechens.


The president of the court, Jean-Paul Costa, said earlier this year that the Russian government was targeted in nearly a fifth of the 90,000 complaints the court still has to process.


Russian President Vladimir Putin has accused it of handing down "political" rulings.


Cases Backed Up


Speaking in Moscow earlier today, Costa voiced hope that Russia would ratify a reform aimed at boosting the court's efficiency.


After talks with the head of Russia's Constitutional Court, Valery Zorkin, Costa said the reform was not "a weapon against Russia."


Russia is the only Council of Europe member state not to have ratified the reform, thereby preventing it from coming into force.


The reform is aimed at allowing more cases to be considered by the court, where they have become increasingly backed up.


The court is the last legal recourse for the citizens of the countries belonging to the Council of Europe.


(Reuters, echr.coe.int, ITAR-TASS)

 
RFE/RL Russia Report


SUBSCRIBE For news and analysis on Russia by e-mail, subscribe to "RFE/RL Russia Report."

You Might Also Like

Angry Over Syria, Arab World Threatens Russian Boycott

Groups in a number of Arab states, angry over the Russian-Chinese veto of a UN resolution aimed at stopping the violence in Syria, have called for a one-day boycott of Russian and Chinese goods on February 12. More

South Ossetian Opposition Leader Hospitalized After Raid

Alla Dzhioyeva, the opposition candidate whose victory in a runoff ballot in November for de facto president of Georgia's breakaway region of South Ossetia was swiftly annulled by the republic's Supreme Court, was taken to a hospital after a raid by some 200 masked security personnel on her headquarters in Tskhinvali. More

Video How To Rig An Election

A whistle-blower in Samara explains how the authorities fixed the Duma elections in December -- and plan to do the same in the presidential vote in March. More

Most Popular

               
 
 
 
 
Being Discussed Now

U.S. Hearing On Balochistan Raises Hackles, Awareness In Pakistan

Latest Comment (6 total)

Saleem: If successive Pakistani governments have failed to deal with the 'Balochistan problem' then ... More

UN Rights Chief Scathing On Syria

Latest Comment (2 total)

Chechen: "Moscow also has had a deal since 1971 with Syria "
Sorry that was ... More

U.K. Releases Radical Cleric On Bail

Latest Comment (1 total)

Martin : Modern Europe has deteriorated to such grotesque that its end has to be ... More