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Mikalay Autukhovich (right) in a photo reportedly taken in prison in 2010
Mikalay Autukhovich (right) in a photo reportedly taken in prison in 2010
MINSK -- Belarusian prison officials say jailed businessman and opposition activist Mikalay Autukhovich slashed his wrists to protest his treatment in prison, RFE/RL's Belarus Service reports.

Heorhiy Prakopchyk, an official at labor camp No. 4 in the southwestern town of Ivatsevichy, told Autukhovich's wife, Alena Autukhovich, on December 22 that her husband had cut his wrists but was in "satisfactory" condition.

Prakopchyk did not give the date of the suicide attempt.

Inmates at the labor camp say the incident took place on December 11, after Autukhovich was released from solitary confinement and then told that he would be transferred to another brigade.

Autukhovich reportedly protested that decision and decided to slash his wrists.

The same sources told RFE/RL that Autukhovich has been placed under a "closed regime" (PKT) at the labor camp for a month as punishment for his suicide attempt.

A transfer to PKT means an inmate spends all day and night in a cell either alone or with one or two cellmates. The convict is usually allowed one hour per day to walk outside in a walled square.

It is unclear when Autukhovich began his PKT term.

On December 13, activists of the Vyasna (Spring) human rights center in Minsk said they had information about Autukhovich's transfer to PKT and called the transfer "the continuation of pressure imposed on Autukhovich by authorities."

Autukhovich and three co-defendants were convicted in May 2010 on charges of illegal possession of weapons and ammunition. Autukhovich was sentenced to five years and two months in jail.

The four were originally charged with preparing terrorist acts against officials in their hometowns of Vaukavysk, Hrodna, and Minsk. Those charges were later dropped.

Autukhovich and his colleagues say the cases against them are politically motivated.

He currently has no legal representative and his lawyer, Paval Sapelka, was disbarred in March this year after having represented jailed presidential candidate Andrey Sannikau.

Read more in Belarusian here
Azimjan Askarov
Azimjan Askarov
BISHKEK -- A lawyer for jailed Kyrgyz human rights activist Azimjan Askarov says he plans to take his case to international courts after the Kyrgyz Supreme Court upheld his client's life sentence on December 20, RFE/RL's Kyrgyz Service reports.
Kairat Zagibaev told RFE/RL that the Supreme Court's decision on December 20 to uphold his conviction and life sentence "shows that the court had no will to remain independent and just."
The court ruled that the case against Askarov -- a Kyrgyz citizen of Uzbek origin -- was proven during the investigation and trial, which was held in southern Kyrgyzstan.
But the court did rule that the prison term of one of Askarov's co-defendants, Minura Mamadalieva, should be shortened from 20 years to 11 years.
Another Askarov lawyer, Nurbek Toktakunov, told RFE/RL on December 20 that the Supreme Court's decision was "unprincipled."
Kyrgyz human rights' organizations issued a joint statement today condemning the Supreme Court's ruling and calling for Askarov's case to be retried.
Askarov and seven other ethnic Uzbeks were found guilty in September 2010 by a court in the southern town of Nooken of organizing ethnic clashes in the Osh region in June of that year and of involvement in the murder of a policeman during the violence.
Askarov and four others were sentenced to life imprisonment, two people were given 20-year prison terms, and one was sentenced to nine years.
Askarov is the head of the local human rights group Vozdukh (Air), and his work for many years focused on prison conditions and police treatment of detainees.
He had reportedly been documenting the killings and arson attacks in southern Kyrgyzstan in June last year in which 400 people, most of them ethnic Uzbeks, were killed and hundreds more wounded.
Askarov says his case is politically motivated. He denies any involvement in the crimes he was convicted of.
The Prague-based NGO People in Need awarded its annual Homo Homini prize to Askarov in March, saying he had continued his rights activism in the face of threats, detention, imprisonment, and physical abuse.
The UN's special rapporteur on torture, Juan Mendez, said in Bishkek on December 13 that he hoped Askarov's case will be retried.

Read more in Kyrgyz here and here

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"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.

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