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No Progress In Armenia's Anti-Torture Policies - Rights Activists

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  • No Progress In Armenia's Anti-Torture Policies - Rights Activists

    NO PROGRESS IN ARMENIA'S ANTI-TORTURE POLICIES - RIGHTS ACTIVISTS

    12:15 ~U 26.06.13

    Armenian human rights activists from the Helsinki committee
    headquarters find the country's anti-torture policies very poor
    and unpromising.

    Speaking to Tert.am, President of the Helsinki Committee of Armenia
    Avetik Ishkhanyan said the Armenian authorities still go round in a
    circle, showing absolutely no signs of progress. Artur Sakunts of the
    Vanadzor Helsinki Association said he believes the situation remains
    as poor as it used to be.

    June 26 is marked around the world as the International Day in support
    of Victims of Torture. The day has been observed annually since 1998.

    Ishkhanyan believes that the police are the most vulnerable targets of
    criticism in matters relating to torture. "They are often unwilling
    to speak of inquests, but they are often accompanied by intimidation
    and battery, sometimes even torture," the activist told our reporter.

    The traditional violations, according to him, are the failure to
    ensure a lawyer's presence during the interrogation, give a suspect
    the right to make the first call or notify the latter of the period
    he or she is expected to remain in police custody.

    Ishkhanyan noted that confessions are often distorted from suspects
    under duress.

    "The situation is unfavorable in other places as well, especially the
    penitentiaries which are closed institutions," said he, adding that
    inmates often remain silent on the existing problems at meetings with
    NGO representatives.

    Armenia is a state party to the European Convention for the Prevention
    of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment

    Commenting on the situation, Sakunts said that the police departments,
    which do not refrain from a torturous conduct, often fail themselves
    to launch proceedings over cases of torture.

    The activist said that the biannual reports published by the Council
    of Europe Parliamentary Assembly's Committee on the Prevention of
    Torture clearly depict the situation in each member state.

    "They give a very accurate description of the situation. Furthermore,
    the committee was on a visit to Armenia this March for conducting
    studies at the police departments," he noted.

    The Committee's representatives, who are authorized to conduct an
    unlimited number of visits to places of detentions, psychiatric
    hospitals etc, were in Armenia to assess the authorities' steps
    towards mitigating the situation of prisoners, especially those
    serving a life sentence.

    The Committee's first report on Armenia was based on a 2008
    post-electoral monitoring. The Committee's experts, who were in the
    country from March 15 to 17, talked to 70 individuals detained over
    the post-electoral unrest.

    They said in subsequent findings that the legislative provision on
    keeping a suspect in detention for no more than 72 hours was very
    often violated.

    Armenian News - Tert.am

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