Ten years in prison for confession under torture
Pavel Plaksa from Minsk was sentenced
to 10 years in a medium security penal colony.
The man was
detained only because investigators supposed he might have been near
the scene of crime. He “confessed” to theft and arson in the
police department. Pavel's relatives say it was done under torture,
Belsat TV reports.
Pavel
Plaksa was detained on
30 May. His mother said investigators in the Leninski district police
department had beaten him and pressed psychologically by threatening
to his relatives. He confessed after three days of tortures.
His
mother says policemen used “inhuman methods”, put a plastic bag
over Pavel's head, beat him cruelly, jumped on his back as he was
lying face down, etc. Plaksa's relatives say Pavel lost consciousness
several times in the police department. An ambulance was called three
times. Doctors indirectly confirm he was beaten. They confirmed he
had bruises, couldn't move his arm and could hardly walk.
What
happens in the Leninski district police department?
Complaints
at torture and cruel treatment in the Leninski district police
department were sent to all possible agencies both by the convicted
man and his relatives. Watchman Vasil
Sarochyk also companied
at beating by policemen in the Leninski district police department.
Police officers wanted him to confess to theft.
Human rights activists note that the Leninski district police
department is notorious for using torture.
“There
has been an absolute lawlessness there until recently. We know the
stories of Pavel Plaksa and Vasil Sarochyk. We have information about
other cases of beating people and initiating criminal procedures.
People are scared. They are not ready to say about this in public,”
says Andrei Bandarenka, the head of the “Platform” organization
that collects information about torture in Belarusian jails and
police stations.
Bandarenka notes that judges
rarely turn attention to words of defendants, who say they had to
confess under torture.
The Investigation Committee started a
criminal case in connection with the beating of Vasil Sarochyk in the
Leninski district police department.