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  • TBILISI: Amnesty International Criticizes "Excessive Use Of Force" B

    AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CRITICIZES "EXCESSIVE USE OF FORCE" BY GEORGIAN LAW ENFORCERS
    By Nino Mumladze

    The Messenger, Georgia
    May 25 2007

    At globalization conference President Saakashvili addresses human
    rights abuses based on ethnicity

    Torture, ill-treatment and excessive use of force by Georgian police
    officers continue to be practiced with impunity in Georgia remarks
    international human rights watchdog Amnesty International (AI) in
    its annual report released on May 23. While on May 24, President
    Saakashvili criticized international human rights organizations for
    not paying enough attention to human rights abuses based on ethnicity
    in Georgia.

    "Pre-trial and convicted prisoners were reportedly ill-treated on
    several occasions, and excessive force was reportedly used in prison
    disturbances in which at least 8 detainees died and many more were
    wounded, including special forces officers. Police officers continued
    to enjoy impunity in dozens of cases in which torture, ill-treatment
    and excessive use of force have been alleged," reads AI's abstract
    on Georgia.

    Not surprisingly, special attention is given to the high-profile murder
    case of Sandro Girgvliani and the Tbilisi prison incident last March
    which took the lives of 7 inmates.

    "In January, officers of the Interior Ministry severely beat and
    otherwise ill-treated Sandro Girgvliani and his friend Levan Bukhaidze
    on the outskirts of Tbilisi...Sandro Girgvliani died as a result of
    injuries he sustained...In July, four officers were sentenced to prison
    terms for causing his death. However, no impartial investigation was
    opened into allegations that those who killed Sandro Girgvliani had
    acted on the orders of senior officials of the Interior Ministry,"
    stresses the report.

    AI says that out of the several alleged instances of ill-treatment and
    excessive force against inmates in detention facilities and prisons,
    only the case of Tbilisi prison disturbances last March was subject
    to an official investigation and it did not start until June.

    Moreover the results of the investigation were not made public until
    the end of 2006.

    AI notes a positive move of parliament in April, when time limits were
    removed for bringing up charges against suspects accused of torture,
    inhuman and degrading treatment.

    But comments that the human right's group expresses regret that the
    government did not extend the two-year Plan of Action against Torture
    which expired in December 2005, "although many recommendations by a
    range of international human rights bodies remained unimplemented."

    Violence against women in the family and freedom of expression at risk
    in conflict zones are the other points underlined by AI. The report
    says authorities failed to protect women from domestic violence or
    bring its perpetrators to justice and reported that, "Most frequently,
    women were beaten, hit and kicked, but they were also burned with
    cigarettes, had their heads bashed against walls, or were raped."

    The report is also critical of Georgian authorities for not gathering
    comprehensive statistics on domestic violence. It also points out that
    despite "an important step" of adopting a new law on domestic violence
    in May, "implementation of the provision for temporary shelters for
    victims of domestic violence was postponed until 2008."

    The Committee urges that a national action plan to combat domestic
    violence be completed and implemented.

    In terms of freedom of expression, AI claims civil society activists
    in South Ossetia risked harassment from the secessionist authorities
    because of contact with Georgian activists. The report refers to an
    incident when the mother of civil society activist, Alan Dzhusoity
    was dismissed from the position of headmistress of a Tskhinvali school
    in South Ossetia "in an apparent attempt by the authorities of South
    Ossetia to put pressure on her son to end his contacts with Georgian
    civil society organizations."

    In the same context, on May 24, President Saakashvili complained
    about the international community's lack of attention to continued
    human rights abuses in Georgia based on ethnicity.

    "Two months ago, Georgian books from all the schools in Gagra [a town
    in breakaway Abkhazia] were publicly burned in the town center. Where
    was the international community at that time and why didn't anyone
    say anything? If in the 21st century we allow the existence of
    such an ideology - wherein someone can't return home just because
    of ethnic origin, it means not only do we not have a state, but it
    also indicates humankind has serious problems," Saakashvili declared
    at an international conference on globalization and dialogue among
    civilizations in Tbilisi.

    He also stressed the importance of tolerance in a country as
    multi-ethnic as Georgia.

    "When I was in the opposition, I was saying and I will repeat it many
    times: for those people, who hate Armenians in Georgia, I will be
    Armenian; for those who hate Azeris, I will be Azeri....Of course,
    it will be a great honor to me to be Jew," Saakashvili said.

    http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/03/tu rkey_joins_ch.html
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