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People crowd outside the Committee Against Torture's headquarters following an attack on the premises in Grozny on June 3.
People crowd outside the Committee Against Torture's headquarters following an attack on the premises in Grozny on June 3.

An angry mob attacked the Grozny office of the Committee Against Torture (KPP) on June 3, forcing employees of the prominent Russian human rights group to escape from the windows of the second-floor office.

The KPP posted videos and photos of the attack in the Chechen capital on social media.

One showed a group of men -- some of them masked and wielding hammers, iron bars, and mallets -- smashing a vehicle parked outside the building that houses the office.

Another showed a masked man standing on an office balcony tearing down security cameras to the cheers and whistles of a large crowd gathered below.

Pictures tweeted by the KPP included one showing the trashed interior of the office...

...a close-up of the man on the balcony...

...and another showing a group of men standing in the smoke-filled entrance to the office.

In a running Twitter commentary during the attack, KPP leader Igor Kalyapin wrote that his attempts to call the Grozny police had gone unanswered and that he had informed Mikhail Fedotov, chairman of Russia's Human Rights Council, about the attack.

The group gathered outside the office held umbrellas and posters saying: "Dadayev Is A Victim Of Lawlessness!" and asking "Why Do The Kalyapins Keep Mum?"

Dzhambulat Dadayev, a resident of Grozny, was killed by a law enforcement group from Russia's Stavropol region in the Chechen capital on April 19.

The killing led Chechnya's Kremlin-backed leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, to issue an order for his law enforcement officers to "shoot to kill" security forces from other parts of Russia that conduct operations in Chechnya without Grozny's consent.

Russia's Interior Ministry denounced Kadyrov's order, calling it "unacceptable for the leader of the Chechen Republic."

The Chechen government-controlled Grozny-TV state television channel reported on June 3 that "public organizations picketed" the Chechen capital's KPP office "to protest against the politicization of human rights activities."

In December, Kalyapin criticized Kadyrov for saying that the families of men involved in a deadly attack on Grozny that month should be expelled from Chechnya and their homes destroyed.

Kadyrov later accused Kalyapin of receiving money from Western intelligence services and giving it to the group involved in the December attack.

On December 11, several Kadyrov supporters pelted Kalyapin and his colleagues with eggs, disrupting a press conference in Moscow in which Kalyapin was speaking against the Chechen leader's order to impose collective punishment against the relatives of the alleged militants.

On December 13, the KPP office in Grozny, was set on fire by unknown arsonists.

In mid-December, the U.S. State Department, the European Union, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch urged Russian authorities to ensure the safety of all human rights defenders in Chechnya and across Russia after the reports about the KPP's ordeal.

In January, Kalyapin announced that his group would fight the "foreign agent" label designation imposed on the group by the Russian government.

In a telephone interview with RFE/RL's Current Time program, Kalyapin confirmed that his group received financial support from foreign sources but said it had never been involved in politics.

Atena Farghadani (file photo)
Atena Farghadani (file photo)

Amnesty International says the sentencing of Iranian artist and activist Atena Farghadani to more than 12 years in prison is a "terrible injustice" and a "violation her rights to free expression and association."

The London-based group said on June 2 that Farghadani was sentenced to 12 years and nine months in prison on charges that included "insulting members of parliament through paintings."

AI Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui said, “Such harsh and unjust sentences seem to be part of a disturbing trend in Iran, where the cost of voicing peaceful dissent is escalating.”

Farghadani’s initial arrest last year is said to be linked to her image that features Iranian lawmakers depicted as animals while voting on a draft law that restricts access to contraception.

Amnesty said the case follows the sentencing last month of another Iranian woman, Atena Daemi, to more than 10 years in prison, “also on charges stemming from her peaceful activism.”

“Both are prisoners of conscience and must be freed immediately,” it added.

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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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