Accessibility links

Breaking News

Watchdog

Ales Byalyatski (file photo)
Ales Byalyatski (file photo)
Belarusian officials targeted by new European Union sanctions include a government minister and others involved in the prosecution of a prominent rights activist.

The names were officially published one day after EU foreign ministers agreed to impose asset freezes and visa bans on 16 individuals.

The 16 are added to a list of nearly 200 Belarusian officials targeted over Minsk's crackdown on government opponents in the wake of last year's disputed presidential election.

They include four people involved in the detention and prosecution of leading human rights activist Ales Byalyatski, the head of the Vyasna (Spring) human rights center in Belarus who was arrested in August and charged with tax evasion.

The arrest of Byalyatski, who was active in defending those caught up in the postelection crackdown, drew widespread international condemnation.

The four are: Tax Minister Uladzimer Paluyan, Judge Uladzimer Kornau, and prosecutors Maksim Shastakou and Volha Herasimovich.

Byalyatski faces up to seven years in prison if found guilty.

His arrest was an embarrassment to EU members Poland and Lithuania after it emerged they unwittingly helped the case against Byalyatski by providing Minsk with his banking information.

Others targeted by the expanded EU sanctions include judges and the directors of two prison camps the EU said were responsible for the "inhuman treatment" of detainees and persecution of jailed former presidential candidate Mikalay Statkevich and civil society activist Zmitser Dashkevich.

Meanwhile, relatives and colleagues of Byalyatski said on October 11 that they have not received letters from him for more than a month.

Belarusian human rights defender Uladzimer Labkovich told RFE/RL's Belarus Service that "we are really concerned over the fact that we have lost any connection with Ales."

Labkovich added that he, along with Byalyatski's relatives and other colleagues, have been writing to him, but "we are afraid that our letters have not reached him either."

According to Labkovich, the Belarusian authorities may be preventing any contact between Byalyatski and his relatives and colleagues in order to hide "the real situation and conditions faced by Byalyatski in the detention center."

"We are aware that the authorities are conducting repressive measures against jailed political prisoners in general, and therefore we are very concerned that Byalyatski and other political prisoners are literally kept secretly in their cells, unable to talk to the outside world."

Read more in Belarusian here
MOSCOW -- Russia's Investigative Committee has begun investigating the death of a teacher in a Moscow pretrial detention center over the weekend, RFE/RL's Russian Service reports.

Andrei Kudoyarov, 48, a teacher in Moscow's secondary school No 1308, died of an apparent heart attack on October 8. He had been charged with extortion.

Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin told journalists on October 11 that the investigation assumes "dereliction of professional duty with unintended fatal consequences."

Russian human rights activists are demanding an independent investigation.

Moscow Bureau for Human Rights Head Aleksandr Brod, told RFE/RL on October 10 the problem is not whether or not Kudoyarov was guilty but rather the routine violation of the rights of Russian citizens suspected of crimes or wrongdoing.

"Kudoyarov's death has reminded us yet again of the inhuman conditions faced by people in detention centers and jails, of torture, of the pressure the authorities exert on lawyers, of poor medical care in penitentiaries," Brod said.

Brod said it is unclear why every suspect, including those who do not pose the slightest danger to society, must be kept in detention.

Lawyer Vladimir Zherebenkov, whose client, Russian businesswoman Vera Trifonova, died in a pretrial detention center in Moscow in April last year, told RFE/RL both Trifonova and Kudoyarov died as a result of "the very low professional level of medical personnel in detention centers."

"Medical personnel in Russian penitentiaries and detention centers are not independent, but subordinate to the management of those penitentiaries, which leads to violations of inmates' right to receive professional and timely medical service when needed," Zherebenkov said.

Read more in Russian here

Load more

About This Blog

"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

Subscribe

Journalists In Trouble

RFE/RL journalists take risks, face threats, and make sacrifices every day in an effort to gather the news. Our "Journalists In Trouble" page recognizes their courage and conviction, and documents the high price that many have paid simply for doing their jobs. More

XS
SM
MD
LG