Chechnya: The Council Of Europe Must Act To Stop Further Abuses
* News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International *
24 January 2001 EUR 46/003/2001 14/01
Amnesty International today called upon the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) to take urgent
action to prevent human rights violations in Chechnya. The Assembly meets tomorrow to evaluate Russia's progress on
human rights in Chechnya.
"As a defender of human rights the Council of Europe has a responsibility to ensure that strong pressure is applied to
Russia." Amnesty International said. "It has an obligation to remind the Russian authorities that no country is above
the law."
Amnesty International has been collecting evidence of daily abuses in Chechnya. The organization has received
information indicating that large numbers of people have been arbitrarily detained, with many held incommunicado. The
organization also has evidence of summary executions and the indiscriminate killing of civilians. Amnesty International
has compiled testimonies from victims of torture and from people who have been detained in "filtration camps" without
access either to lawyers or to their families. Their testimony suggests that detainees in these camps have suffered
systematic beatings with clubs and hammers, rape, electric shocks and subjection to tear gas. Detainees have also
reported cases in which teeth were filed off.
Ethnic Chechens continue to be targeted by the Russian authorities, not only inside Chechnya but throughout the Russian
Federation.
Despite Russian government assurances that all crimes against civilians will be investigated, the perpetrators remain
unpunished. Neither of the bodies established by the Russian authorities - the National Public Commission, or the Office
of the Special Representative of the President on Human Rights and Freedoms in the Chechen Republic - have a mandate to
undertake investigations.
Of all criminal cases reported by the Russian authorities to have been initiated against Russian serviceman, it appears
that the vast majority are related to internal matters, such as bullying in the army, while human rights violations
against civilians have prompted a mere 47 cases. Despite the Russian government's recent claim that up to 10 cases have
reached court, Amnesty International is not aware of the specific nature of the charges because they have not been made
public.
Amnesty International calls upon the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe to:
* support the call for an international investigation into human rights abuses in Chechnya
* demand that the Russian authorities review, as a matter of urgency, all cases in which ethnic Chechens have been
convicted of possession of drugs and weapons on the basis of allegedly fabricated evidence. There are at least 50 such
cases in Moscow alone.
* demand that the Russian authorities stop the use of the mandatory residence permit requirement ("propiska"), often
used as a tool for persecution and detention of ethnic Chechens and other people from the Caucasus.
* demand that the Russian government is completely open in providing updates to the Assembly and to the public on
investigations into crimes against civilians by servicemen or members of the special police forces.
* pressure the Russian government to account for crimes committed inside Chechnya and take immediate steps to demand
accountability from the Russian authorities for the continuing persecution, discrimination, arbitrary detention, torture
and ill-treatment in custody, and fabrication of criminal cases against Chechens elsewhere in the Russian Federation.
"While Amnesty International does not take a position on the question of membership of governments to international
bodies, the Council of Europe has a duty to its own human rights standards," Amnesty International said. "The government
of the Russian Federation has proved that it lacks the political will to investigate human rights abuses in Chechnya. It
continues to reject the findings of independent human rights organizations on torture and ill-treatment. We are
convinced that any domestic investigations into claims of human rights abuses will prove ineffective."
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