Belarus: Continuing Human Rights Concerns
Since Amnesty International
last addressed the human rights situation in Belarus in the Human Rights
Council, the situation there has not improved. In the last written statement to
the Human Rights Council in September 2011, Amnesty International highlighted
the significant worsening of the human rights situation in Belarus after the
elections in December 2010.
Freedom of assembly
Further restrictions on all forms of public gatherings were imposed. On
29 July 2011, the authorities responded to a wave of “silent protests” that had
been taking place throughout the country with a draconian new law that requires
government permission for carrying out “action or inaction intended as a form
of public expression of socio-political attitude or as a protest.”
In October 2011 both houses of parliament approved an amendment to the
Law on Mass Events. The law which already imposes unreasonable limits on
freedom of assembly now requires organizers of any pre-planned public gathering
to report “financial sources” used for the event; and they are not allowed to
publicize the event until official permission is granted, which might not be
until five days prior to the event. Law enforcement officers also have wider
powers to make audio and video recordings, limit participants’ access to the
event and carry out body searches.
Freedom of association
Registered and unregistered human rights groups continue to face
prosecution and harassment. On 4 August 2011, the Chair of the NGO Viasna Human
Rights Centre (Viasna), Ales Bialiatski, was arrested. He was charged on 12
August with “concealment of income on a large scale” (article 243.2 of the
Belarusian Criminal Code), and on 24 November he was sentenced to four and a
half years’ imprisonment. The charges related to the use of a personal bank
account in Lithuania to support Viasna’s human rights work. Viasna was
derecognized by the Belarusian authorities in 2003 and as such was barred from
opening a bank account in Belarus. Amnesty International considers Ales
Bialiatski to be a prisoner of conscience and demands his unconditional
release.
The Law on Public Associations was changed on 3 October to prohibit
Belarusian NGOs from holding funds or bank accounts abroad.
Prisoners of Conscience
At the end of April 2012 seven people remained in detention in
connection with their participation in the mainly peaceful demonstration on 19
December 2010, four of them have been recognized by Amnesty International as
prisoners of conscience. Pavel Sevyarynets was sentenced to three years on 16
May 2011. Mykalau Statkevich was sentenced to six years on 26 May 2011. On 24
March 2011, Zmitser Dashkevich and Eduard Lobau were sentenced to two and four
years respectively for hooliganism.
In response to international pressure the Belarusian authorities have
released a number of people who were imprisoned for their peaceful
participation in the demonstration on 19 December 2010. On 14 April 2012,
opposition presidential candidate, Andrei Sannikau, was released following a
presidential pardon. He had served 1 year and four months of his five year
sentence. Zmitser Bandarenka, a member of Sannikau’s campaign team, was
released on 15 April. Amnesty International is concerned that the releases of
prisoners of conscience are not unconditional, as they are subject to constant
surveillance by the authorities, and must report to the police about their
whereabouts. Andrei Sannikau was only released after he had been pressurized
into signing a request for a pardon, and has been told that his criminal record
will remain for 8 years. Other released prisoners have reported being unable to
find employment because of their criminal convictions.
Freedom of movement
Amnesty International has been receiving reports that prominent human
rights activists, journalists and oppositional leaders have been prevented from
leaving the country. Valiantsin Stefanovich, deputy chair of the Human Rights
Center “Viasna”, was turned back at the border on 11 March 2012, allegedly in
connection with his failure to appear for military reserve duties. Alyaksandr
Atroshchankau, press secretary of Andrei Sannikau during the election campaign
in 2010 and coordinator of “European Belarus” was prevented from leaving the
country on 11 April 2012. Oleg Volchek, a human rights lawyer, was informed in
March 2012 that his name had been put on a list of those forbidden to leave the
country.
Torture and other ill-treatment
Belarus has taken no action to bring its legislation into line with the
UN Convention against
Torture by introducing an article to criminalize torture. There is no
independent monitoring system of places of detention, and Belarus has not
signed the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention against Torture.
Both Andrei Sannikau and Alyaksei Mihalevich have alleged that they were
tortured during detention. Starting in September 2011, Andrei Sannikau, and
another prisoner of conscience, Zmitser Dashkevich, were subjected to periods
of up to 10 days’ transportation from one prison colony to another during which
time they were threatened by cellmates. Amnesty International believes that
frequent transfers and ill-treatment were intended to pressure Andrei Sannikau
and Zmitser Dashkevich physically and psychologically in order to extract a
request for clemency.
Zmitser Dashkevich, who is serving a two years’ hard labour sentence for
hooliganism was placed in solitary confinement eight times during 2011.
Conditions in solitary confinement include being denied exercise, refused
bedding and deprived of sleep. Amnesty International has also received reports
that Zmitser Dashkevich has been deliberately exposed to ill-treatment at the
hands of fellow prisoners.
Death penalty
Uladzslau Kavalyou and Dzmitry Kanavalau were executed in March 2012 in
connection with a series of bomb attacks in Belarus, most recently in a metro
station in Minsk on 11 April 2011. At first, the exact date of Uladzslau
Kavalyou and Dzmitry Kanavalau’s executions was not known, but on 17 March
2012, Uladzslau Kavalyou’s mother Lubou received a letter from the Supreme
Court dated from 16 March 2012, informing her that her son had been executed.
Belarus continues to carry out executions in conditions of utmost
secrecy. Neither the prisoners, nor the relatives of prisoners condemned to
death, are informed of the execution before it is carried out. The body is not
returned to relatives and they are not informed of the burial site. They are
often kept waiting weeks or even months before they receive the official death
notice.
Amnesty International has serious concerns over the fairness of the
trial. Uladzslau Kavalyou retracted his confession during the trial, claiming
it was obtained under pressure. He claimed that the investigator threatened to
shoot him, and that he could hear Dzmitry Kanavalau screaming. The swiftness of
Dzmitry Kanavalau and Uladzslau Kavalyou’s arrest has also led to scepticism
about the investigation. They were detained the day after the explosion, on 12
April. Violating their right to the presumption of innocence, the President
declared that two men had confessed to the attack before they were even
interrogated.
Official statements claimed they were detained on the basis of security
camera footage, which the prosecution relied on heavily during the trial.
However, the security footage was only seized days after their detention and
the defence lawyer claimed it had been tampered with.
Recommendations
Amnesty International urges the government of Belarus to:
Freedom of assembly
- review the Law on Mass Events
and bring it into line with the requirements of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights;
- immediately and
unconditionally release all those sentenced for their peaceful participation in
the demonstration on 19 December 2010, and to ensure that all those detained
for their peaceful participation in that event under the provisions of the
administrative code are offered appropriate redress;
Freedom of association
- ensure that civil society
organizations are able to register and carry out their legitimate activities
without fear or threat of reprisal or obstruction;
- abolish Article 193-1 of the
Criminal Code, which criminalizes activities by non registered organizations;
- release Ales Bialiatski, the
Chair of the Human Rights centre Viasna, immediately and unconditionally;
Freedom of movement
- ensure that Belarusian
authorities comply with article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights and remove travel bans that are reportedly being implemented in
order to prevent opposition leaders and human rights activists from leaving the
country;
Torture and other ill-treatment
- introduce an article
criminalizing torture to the criminal code in line with the definition in the
Convention against Torture;
- ensure that all allegations of
torture and other ill-treatment are promptly and effectively investigated and
that complainants are protected from reprisals;
Death penalty
- promptly establish a
moratorium on all executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty;
- change article 175 of the
Criminal Executive Code in order to comply with the UN Human Rights Committee’s
2003 ruling on the cases of Bondarenko v. Belarus and Lyashkevich v. Belarus
and ensure that relatives of prisoners on death row are informed of the
execution date and permitted to have the prisoner's body for burial;
- to inform families of those
who have been executed of the burial sites;
- in line with recent UN Human
Rights Council resolution 19/37 on the "Rights of the Child", adopted
on 23 March 2012:
- ensure that children and families of those
on death row have access to their relatives throughout judicial proceedings and
the period of detention, including regular and private meetings with the
prisoners;
- keep relatives informed of the place of
imprisonment of those awaiting the death penalty as well as of the progress of
petitions for pardons, reports presented to bodies such as clemency
commissions, and the reasoning behind the recommendations of these bodies to
support or reject petitions;
- ensure that children that families are
provided, in advance, with adequate information about a pending executions, its
date, time and location, to allow a last visit or communication with the
convicted, the return of the body to the family for burial or to inform on
where the body is located.