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<![endif]-->After the murder
of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya in October 2006 many western cities saw
rallies and candlelight vigils in her memory. But nowhere perhaps, including in
Russia, were they as numerous as in
Finland.
3000 people came to the Russian Embassy in Helsinki to express their grief and dismay. Once part of the Russian Empire and
victim of a Soviet invasion in 1939, Finland clearly felt more shocked than others
and more ready to act. Standing silently
near the Embassy was not enough for a group of activists "concerned", as their
site puts it, "about the erosion of democracy and human rights in Russia". They wanted to carry on what Politkovskaya had
done. Thus was the Finnish-Russian Civic Forum born in January 2007.
Last month, at its third annual seminar, Russian human rights
defenders had a chance to discuss the issues of the day with their western colleagues. Since the last
Forum one of its prominent speakers, the owner of the opposition site Ingushetia.ru, Magomed Yevloyev , has been murdered by the authorities. Death threats, imprisonment and persecutions are part of everyday life for many participants.
The price of asking awkward
questions
Among the participants was Mikhail Trepashkin, a Moscow
lawyer and former FSB colonel who served
a four-year prison term following his investigation into the Moscow apartment
bombings in 1999. This year he came
to Helsinki for the first time - in 2007 he was still in prison and the Forum
called for his release, while in
2008 passport problems prevented him
from getting out of Russia.
However, Trepashkin's
presence does not indicate any substantial change in Russia - a couple of days after the seminar it
became known that one of its participants, the Volgograd journalist Elena Maglevannaya,
had applied
for political asylum in Finland.
Maglevannaya had dared to write in the Volgograd paper "Free Speech" about the torture of
Zubair Zubairaev , a Chechen held in a Volgograd prison. This man, sentenced
in 2007 to 5 years imprisonment on very dubious
charges, was routinely beaten up
and tortured - among other things he had
his knee pierced with a screwdriver and his feet nailed to the ground. Unlike many others, he had the courage to
complain.
His story became
well-known to human rights activists and was often cited as an example
of the appalling treatment of Chechens in Russian prisons - numerous
photographs of Zubairaev's wounds are available on the Internet. However, the prison
where Zubairaev was held accused the journalist of lying and took her to court claiming - in the best
traditions of Russian repressive methods
derided in the 19th century by Gogol - that the Chechen had
mutilated himself.
On 14th May the court found Maglevannaya guilty
of defamation and insisted that she retract what she knew to be the truth. Disobeying a court decision is in itself a
criminal offence, punishable by up to two years in prison. Faced with a threat of legal prosecution Elena
Maglevannaya felt that she would not be
able to carry on with her work and asked for
political asylum. Meanwhile, Zubairaev was sent to Krasnoyarsk
in Siberia, to serve his term in even stricter
conditions, and was beaten up again on the way.
Chechens in Russian
prisons
Dreadful as the fate
of Zubair Zubairaev is, it is by no
means unique. In her speech,
Maglevannaya stressed that about 20, 000 Chechens aged between 20 and 30 are being held today in Russian
prisons. Under torture many of them have admitted committing non-existent
crimes and received very long prison terms as a result. Although all of them were captured during or
just after the war (which Russia preferred to call the "establishment of constitutional order"), they
are denied POW status and treated like
criminal offenders. In addition the prison personnel is more often than not
recruited from soldiers and officers who
recently fought the Chechens as enemies and who simply carry on torturing and
mutilating them as they did during the
conflict.
Chechens are among
the most vulnerable people in Russian prisons (where rights of inmates are
routinely ignored anyway). For they are discriminated against not only on the
grounds of their ethnicity, as are others from the Caucasus, but also as
"terrorists" and "bandits" - the labels
habitually used by the Russian authorities during the conflict.
Justice ‘shanghai'd'
The indiscriminate use of terms is typical of a state not
based on the rule of law. It becomes even more dangerous when it is used in
inter-state agreements. Elena Ryabinina from the Civic Assistance group spoke
at the Forum about the Shanghai Convention ratified by Russia in 2003.
The full name of this document, signed by 6 members of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organisation (China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tadjikistan and
Uzbekistan), is the Shanghai
Convention on Combating Terrorism, Separatism and Extremism . Apart from
putting separatism alongside terrorism and extremism and thus making it
criminal, the convention obliges the participating states to refuse asylum to
those suspected of any of the above mentioned activities and to extradite them at the request of one of these
states.
In practice, as Ryabinina explained, this leads to deporting
people who have not been proven guilty to countries where they might be
tortured. This in itself demonstrates a glaring contradiction between Russia's
membership in different European structures, like the Council of Europe, and its being a co-signatory of the Shanghai Convention. Once human rights defenders manage to have these
cases heard at the European Court
in Strasburg, they are sure to win them, as they are supported by the clause
prohibiting extradition to countries where torture is applied. However, the
legal basis of the Shanghai Convention and the legitimacy of Russia's involvement in it have yet
to be considered at the necessary official level.
Another dangerous consequence of this involvement, according to Elena Ryabinina, is discrimination
on religious grounds directed against Muslims resident in Russia or coming to
Russia as asylum-seekers. The
regulations of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organisation stipulate that laws existing in its member-states take priority
over domestic legislation and Russia
effectively follows the laws developed in Central Asian countries, where belonging
to any group that has been labelled with the vague term "non-conventional
Islam" can lead to charges of Islamic
extremism.
Such cases have been fabricated in Russia during the last 5 years, and not
only in the North Caucasus, but also in Central Russia, in the Volga region, in the Urals and in
Western Siberia. And as Ryabinina stressed, this cannot but have a profound effect on society: persecuting
Muslims on suspicion of belonging to non -violent groups
(like Hizb ut -Tahrir and others) and accusing them of preparing the violent
overthrow of the authorities turns some people into victims, others into
informers and brings about the
popularity of radical Islam as a form of protest against injustice.
Misuse of
anti-extremism
Several other speakers at the seminar also expressed their
concern about the loose use of the terms
"extremism" and "terrorism" which has
become a powerful tool in the hands of the
Russian special services. "Terrorism"
seems to work better on an international level. Oksana Chelysheva, journalist
and Deputy Director of Russian-Chechen
Friendship Society drew the attention of the audience to the issue raised
earlier this year by an Austrian Green MP,
Peter Pilz.
After the murder of Kadyrov's critic Umar Israilov in Vienna, Pilz accused
the Austrian Interior Minister of allowing Russian FSB agents access to the files of the Chechens who had
received asylum in Austria. Naturally, the Minister insisted that it had been
done within the framework of counter-terrorist cooperation...
The term "extremism" is
more popular internally and works against any dissent almost as
obligingly as the notorious Article 58 accusations of "anti-Soviet agitation
and propaganda" did in Soviet times. Galina Kozhevnikova from the Sova Centre for Information and Analysis,
which monitors hate-crimes prompted by
nationalism and xenophobia, spoke in
Helsinki about the double-edged character of the law against extremism in
Russia. On the one hand it is used against violent racism, on the other - and this
happens perhaps even more often - it is directed against the political
opposition, as many of those present at the seminar could confirm. The Sova Centre has recently started
monitoring what they call the misuse of anti- extremism by the authorities.
Rise of racist attacks
Another kind of extremism that needs to be monitored is violent
activity by ultra-nationalists and racists. In the last 5 years the number
of violent racist attacks against
dark-skinned people as well as people from Central Asia, Caucasus and other
people of "non-Slavic " appearance has been growing at a rate of about 20 per
cent a year. The attacks are very often inspired by the state-controlled media
- as in the cases of the notorious
anti-Georgian hysteria or quite recently of the racist coverage of Barak Obama's
presidential campaign.
Galina Kozhevnikova
acknowledged with satisfaction the recent attempts by prosecutors in
Moscow to stop some racist groups and individuals, attempts which in her view
are bringing positive results. However,
she was quite worried about the tendency
of the pro-Kremlin youth groups ( like "The Young Guard", a youth wing of the ruling "United Russia" party) to borrow xenophobic slogans from various racist
movements and thus legitimise them.
Another worrying trend in her opinion is the decreasing number
of testimonies from witnesses of hate-crimes or racist attacks - fear of reporting them is growing, because
even blogging about these cases on the net has often led to beatings and
persecution of the witnesses.
The Finnish organizers of Forum -2009 tried very hard to place
the Russian human rights activists within the framework of human rights
movements in the West, dividing the agenda of this year's seminar roughly into
"Minority Rights" (religious, ethnic and sexual minorities) and "Political
Repression". As Heidi Hautala, the Chairperson of Finnish-Russian Civic Forum,
explained, they thought it was very important for every minority to understand
that it was only by working together and supporting each other that they can hope
to succeed in solving their problems. And although this is of course true, in
the Russian context discrimination against
minorities nearly always has a
political meaning behind it. That is why the presentations which laid bare the
political background of discrimination in Russia were much more interesting
than straightforward - often historical -
reports of the limitations imposed upon
this or that minority or even examples of getting over them.
Legacy of the Gulag
The arbitrary nature of the Russian judicial system was
another recurring theme in the conference. Mikhail Trepashkin spoke about it
both as a prisoner and as a lawyer. The
notorious lack of independence of Russian courts makes the authorities absolute
masters of the situation.
Fabricating cases
against trouble-makers by falsifying evidence or planting weapons ( of
which Trepashkin himself was a victim) are
by no means exceptional. Arrests remain the preferred way of dealing
with suspects - bail or a written undertaking not to leave one's
place of residence are used very rarely.
That is why even according to the official statistics in
2008 about 1 million people in
Russia found themselves in custody. Appeal hearings are not common
either. Often it is enough for one judge
to reject an appeal. Then people end up
in prison, where, even if they are not literally tortured, the very conditions
of their stay are a torture in themselves and result in their health being
gradually impaired.
Elena Sannikova, a Soviet dissident imprisoned from 1984 to
1987, in her paper on political repression in today's Russia was forced to the
sad conclusion that the country seems to have been unable to get the legacy of the Gulag out of its system or even to modernise its penitentiary institutions.
Eloquent absences
Olga Kurnosova from the St Petersburg branch of Kasparov's
United Civic Front could not come to the
seminar because she had been charged
with smuggling (police found in her bag a can
of caviar given to her as a present).
Galina Kozhevnikova came from the States where she and the
Director of Sova Centre Alexander Verkhovsky are staying temporarily after
receiving numerous death threats in Moscow. Oksana Chelysheva can't go back
home to Nizhny Novgorod because the
local authorities have charged her with extremism. Sergei Aksenov , one of
the leaders of the National Bolshevik Party, was detained in Moscow just days after the seminar as one
of the organizers of an unsanctioned rally under the slogan "Russia Without
Putin".
When asked about next
year's seminar, the Chairperson of FinRosForum Heidi Hautala suggested that it
might take place in Russia. This year's proceedings suggest that Russia will have to change dramatically before this
can happen.
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