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Harassment Of Human Rights Activists Is Widespread In CIS - Report

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  • Harassment Of Human Rights Activists Is Widespread In CIS - Report

    HARASSMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS IS WIDESPREAD IN CIS -- REPORT
    Jean-Christophe Peuch

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Dec 13 2007

    The OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR)
    has been at the center of a struggle between western countries and
    some CIS states that blame it for its critical assessment of most
    elections held in the former Soviet Union since 1991. In particular,
    Russia and a number of its neighbors accuse the ODIHR of meddling
    in turbulent elections that brought new, Western-oriented political
    leaders to power in Georgia and Ukraine.

    But ODIHR's activities are not limited to election monitoring. As
    its name indicates, it also deals -- more broadly -- with human
    rights and democratization. The Warsaw-based office on December 10
    issued a report, the first of its kind, which identifies patterns of
    harassment against human rights defenders in the OSCE area between
    April 2006 and April 2007. The presentation, which coincided with
    the 59th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
    took place at the OSCE headquarters in Vienna.

    Called "Human Rights Defenders In The OSCE Region: Our Collective
    Conscience," the report is unlikely to mollify ODIHR's critics, as it
    clearly identifies Russia and several other former Soviet republics
    as countries where restrictions imposed on rights activists are
    the most frequent. The report also contains recommendations to OSCE
    participating states on how to improve working conditions for human
    rights defenders. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Among those experts who helped draft the 70-page document is
    Belarusian human rights advocate Ales Byalyatski, whose Vyasna
    (Spring) organization has been repeatedly denied registration by
    President Aleksandr Lukashenko's administration.

    "This report is no light literature. It is a dramatic document,"
    said Byalyatski, who is also vice president of the International
    Federation of Human Rights. "The situation of human rights defenders
    and organizations and the way individual states react to their
    activities are a very precise indicator of how authorities in those
    countries consider human rights," he told the panel of OSCE ambassadors
    -- mostly Western -- who attended the December 10 presentation.

    ODIHR Director Christian Strohal identified the patterns of violations
    affecting human rights defenders -- which he said often occur with
    the explicit or tacit approval of local governments -- as follows:
    physical attacks; curtailment of freedom of association; failure
    to respect the freedom of assembly; and restrictions imposed on the
    freedom of movement.

    Among individual cases that were mentioned at the launching of
    the report were the October 2006 slaying of Russian journalist and
    human rights activist Anna Politkovskaya, and the tragic death of
    Ogulsapar Muradova in Turkmenistan. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    A RFE/RL correspondent affiliated with the Bulgaria-based Turkmen
    Helsinki Foundation rights group, Muradova died in custody in September
    of 2006. Relatives say she died as a result of ill-treatment, but
    Turkmen authorities attribute her death to natural causes. They also
    deny that Muradova was a journalist, or a human rights activist. At
    a closed trial held a few days before her death, Muradova and two
    other people had been sentenced to heavy jail terms on dubious arms
    possession charges.

    Another high-profile case mentioned by Byalyatski is that of
    Umida Niyazova, an Uzbek investigative journalist who worked as a
    translator for the New York-headquartered Human Rights Watch (HRW)
    organization. Niyazova was arrested in December 2006 and charged with
    illegal border crossing, smuggling, and fostering civil unrest with
    the help of foreign funding.

    On May 1, a Tashkent court sentenced Niyazova to seven years in jail.

    Following harsh western reactions, a higher Uzbek court later reduced
    that sentence to a three-year suspended jail term, but only after
    Niyazova agreed to plea guilty and state that she had been deceived
    by HRW.

    At the time of Niyazova's release, another 14 Uzbek rights defenders
    remained in custody.

    Among them was Gulbahor Turayeva. The name of Turayeva, a physician
    by training, became well-known after she gave foreign media her own
    account of the May 2005 bloody government crackdown in Andijan. Uzbek
    authorities arrested her in January 2007 and charged her with
    threatening the constitution. Turayeva was sentenced to six years
    in jail and released in June after publicly expressing regret for
    her activities.

    Among other Central Asian rights campaigners who were physically
    assaulted during the period covered by the ODIHR report are
    Uzbekistan's Yelena Urlayeva, Bahtiyor Hamrayev, and Rahmatullo
    Alibayev. Attacks were also reported on Kyrgyzstan's Edil Baisalov
    and Ramazan Dyryldayev.

    Georgia appears in the ODIHR report among those countries where human
    rights defenders suffer milder forms of harassment. In February,
    Interior Ministry officers visited the premises of the Human Rights
    Information and Documentation Center, claiming they wanted to learn
    about the organization's activities, and threatened several employees.

    The ODIHR reports also contained information about intimidation
    attempts against a non-governmental organization that promotes the
    rights of Georgia's ethnic minorities. Unknown individuals in June
    broke into the Tbilisi office of Multinational Georgia and stole
    several documents, including the draft of an alternative report on
    the implementation of the Convention for the Protection of National
    Minorities to be addressed to the United Nations and the Council of
    Europe. The incident followed unsuccessful government attempts to
    obtain this document from Multinational Georgia employees.

    In its latest report on human rights violations worldwide, HRW
    took note of repeated instances of government harassment against
    the Georgian Young Lawyers Association (GYLA), a non-governmental
    organization that promotes national legislation that is more protective
    of human rights. In addition, the group has been critical of President
    Mikheil Saakashivli's policies. For example, then-defense minister
    Irakli Okruashvili in 2006 accused the GYLA of misusing foreign funds
    and demanded the resignation of its then-chairwoman, Ana Dolidze.

    Lawyers engaged in human rights work can also face administrative
    harassment, as in Armenia, where three defense attorneys were
    prosecuted for appealing the sentencing of three soldiers accused
    of murder.

    The ODIHR report contains numerous occurrences of harassment targeting
    Russian and Belarusian human rights defenders. Violations were also
    reported in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and a number of non-CIS countries.

    The report additionally includes a summary of written responses sent
    by OSCE participating states on individual cases. A simple look at
    the list shows that most of those post-Soviet countries which figure
    prominently in that document declined to comment.

    Also, none of them attended the presentation ceremony.

    Summarizing the report, ODIHR Director Strohal said: "The situation
    is not improving, to put it diplomatically."

    "The situation of human rights advocates and the pressure they have
    been exposed to [tells us] very clearly that [we are facing] a major
    challenge," he added.

    Editor's Note: Jean-Christophe Peuch is a Vienna-based freelance
    correspondent, who specializes in Caucasus- and Central Asia-related
    developments.
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