| Nasha Viasna: Review-Chronicle of Human Rights Violations in Belarus in September 2009 |
| Thursday, 15 October 2009 | |
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A Report by Nasha Viasna (www.spring96.org) September closes the additional six-month test period that was given to the Belarusian authorities for starting democratic transformations in the country. Meanwhile, the authorities did not make any significant steps for the improvement of the situation of human rights in Belarus. The fundamental freedoms, such as the freedom of association, the freedom of expression and the freedom of consciousness remained restricted. On 24 September, during the briefing for representatives of international missions and journalists the Assembly of pro-Democratic NGOs voiced its preliminary evaluation of the activities of the Belarusian authorities on normalization of the situation of NGOs in the view of the end of another period of suspension of sanctions by the EU. Siarhei Matskevich, head of the Working group of the Assembly of NGOs, stated the absence of progress on the three points on which the European Union insisted: the abolishment of Article 193.1 of the Criminal Code, the abolishment of the death penalty, the solution of the problem of non-registration of civil organizations and introduction of reduced-price office rent tariff for them. Many youth and human rights associations faced registration denials in March-September. In the overwhelming majority of cases the denials are wire-drawn and motivated by the political will of the authorities, who try to prevent the legalization of new NGOs and political parties. In September a number of peaceful actions were violently dispersed in Minsk. Their participants were beaten by the police. On 9 September in Kastrychnitskaya Square in Minsk there was held a peaceful action of protest against the arrival of the Russian troops on the territory of Belarus for joint military trainings. The action was held under the slogan ‘Say NO to the Russian occupation! Long live Belarus!’ and was dated to the beginning of the joint Belarusian-Russian military training West-2009. The police detained about 30 persons. 17 of them were later fined for participation in unauthorized mass action. The detentions were accompanied with the use of physical violence and foul language. At Tsentralny district police department the police made the detainees stand facing the wall for four hours. Some of them were severely beaten. Human rights defenders called upon the prosecutorial organs to hold check-ups on the facts of abuse of the duty powers by police officers and punish the guilty according to the law. On 16 September the democratic community of Belarus marked the 10th anniversary of the abduction of the oppositional politician Viktar Hanchar and the businessman Anatol Krasouski. The authorities still pay no interest to the disclosure of this crime and don’t give any substantial answers about its investigation to the relatives of the missing persons. On the Solidarity Day Minsk police dispersed the action in the memory of Viktar Hanchar and Anatol Krasouski. More than 20 people were detained. Policemen in mufti banned journalists to make photos and videos of the events. The action participants were severely beaten during the detention and after it. Mikalai Statkevich suffered most of all. All detainees were guarded to the police department and later were released without getting any charges. Charges under Article 23.34 of the Administrative Code (holding of unauthorized mass action) were drawn up on the detained participants of analogical action in Homel. On 17 September Sweden, which is heading the EU now, issued an official statement demanding that Minsk should stop using violence against peaceful demonstrators and guarantee to journalists the safe conditions for their work in the country. The Belarusian Association of Journalists expressed its protest and demanded to punish the perpetrators of the grave violations of the freedom of expression. The issue of political prisoners and politically motivated persecution is still topical for Belarus: the Young Front activist Artsiom Dubski is serving a personal restraint term in Mahiliou prison. A part of the figurants of the ‘process of 14’ (Maxim DashukAles Straltsou and Ales Charnyshou) are serving their terms of personal restraint at home, while some other ones (Aliaksei Bondar, Mikhail Kryvau and Tatsiana Tsishkevich) are still abroad and cannot return to Belarus. On 19 September the Young Front announced the beginning of a wide civil campaign for Belarusization under the title For Belarusian Language. The aim of the campaign organizations is to press for Belarusization of all spheres of the civil life of Belarus, first of all the sphere of education. The main means of the campaign is collecting signatures under the addresses to the state organs demanding to provide real equality of the Belarusian language with the Russian. A number of street educational events are also planned within the frames of the campaign. The five-month long campaign will be finished on 21 February, International Mother Language Day. The Young Front intends to pass at least 50 000 signatures to the state organs: the parliament, the government, the presidential administration and a number of other state organs. On 20-24 September a group of international organizations dealing with the freedom of press and media paid an official visit to Belarus. One of the participants of this international missing, member of the Civil Rights Defenders (former Swedish Helsinki Committee) Joanna Kurosz was denied Belarusian visa. Following its visit the delegation called upon the authorities of Belarus to put the media sphere of the country in line with the international standards. Besides, the mission made some recommendations seeking to improve the situation of state and independent mass media in Belarus, increase their professionalism, pluralism and social importance. 1. Right to association On 3 September the Supreme Court of Belarus turned down the cassation appeal of the founders of the human rights association Brestskaya Viasna against the verdict of Brest oblast court, upholding the ruling of the justice department of Brest oblast executive committee on the registration denial. As said by one of the organization founders, human rights defender Uladzimir Vialichkin, the trial had predictable results. The Ministry of Justice suspended the registration of the Belarusian Party of Workers and required additional documents about the order of its creation. On 21 September members of the organizing committee of the BPW filed a complaint with the Supreme Court against the actions of the Ministry of Justice. On 19 September they submitted a letter to the Ministry, in which they refused to pass to it the minutes of the assemblies of the initiative groups on nomination of delegates to the constituent assembly. As stated by the head of the organizing committee Aliaksandr Bukhvostau, the demands of the Ministry of Justice on presenting additional documents are unlawful. The party founders hope that as a result of their lawsuit to the Supreme Court the Ministry of Justice will stop ‘conducting a repressive check-up of the establishment of the party’. The Belarusian Party of Workers is the legal successor of the Belarusian Labor Party that was liquidated in 2004. 2. Freedom of expression and the right to disseminate information On 2 September the photo correspondent of the Intex-press newspaper Liudmila Prakopava was detained on the territory of airbase #61 where she elucidated the return of the bodies of two Belarusian perished pilots (Aliaksandr Marfitski and Aliaksandr Zhuraulevich had been lost at the air-show in Poland). The journalist and the chief editor of the newspaper Uladzimir Yanukevich who also came to the airbase had to write explanatory notes. The journalist was released four hours after the detention. L.Prakopava pointed that it wasn’t a military training or an exposition of new military weapons, but a socially important event. ‘Of course, the military servants have their own understanding of professional duty. Pitifully enough, the professional duty of a journalist is insignificant for them,’ she commented. On 28 September in Rahachou the police detained Vasil Paliakou, head of Homel oblast branch of the United Civil Party. This day the party activists distributed informational materials including the Satsyialnaya Abarona bulletin within the frames of the campaign of the United Democratic Forces for returning the social benefits to the low income categories of population. At the police station the party leader was required to give explanations and then was released. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied accreditation to the journalist of Radio Racyja Viktar Parfionenka. The concrete reasons for the denial weren’t explained. The journalist received the negative answer from the Ministry only four months after he applied for accreditation. The well-known TV cameraman and photo artist Vadzim Arshynski was mailed a prosecutorial working for violation of Article 11 of the law On mass media because of his cooperation with the BelSat Polish TV channel. ‘The prosecutor’s office again demonstrates the unawareness about the norms of the Belarusian legislation and violates it itself,’ commented the deputy chairman of the Belarusian Association of Journalists Andrei Bastunets. ‘It is not the first time when they issue warnings without taking any explanations first’. On the count of the BAJ lawyers, since the enforcement of the new law On mass media the Belarusian journalists who cooperated with foreign media were issued 13 warnings for absence of accreditation.
3. Right to peaceful assemblies
7. Freedom of consciousness Navapolatsk entrepreneur Yauhenia Bochurnaya went on an indefinite hunger-strike of protest in Homel women’s colony #4. She did it after she was prohibited to buy any goods in the prison shop. Before this she repeatedly addressed the department of punishment execution of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the prosecutor’s office with complaints about the unsatisfactory incarceration conditions in her prison. In response she faced reprisals from the side of the prison administration. |