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Georgia: Amnesty International Report 2007

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  • Georgia: Amnesty International Report 2007

    Amnesty International Report 2007


    GEORGIA

    Head of state: Mikheil Saakashvili
    Head of government: Zurab Noghaideli
    Death penalty: abolitionist for all crimes
    International Criminal Court: ratified

    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 eight 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. The authorities failed
    to protect women from domestic violence or bring its perpetrators to
    justice. A new law on domestic violence was a positive step, although
    it postponed the setting up of urgently needed temporary shelters for
    women and children. The internationally unrecognized breakaway areas
    of Abkhazia and South Ossetia retained the death penalty. Civil
    society activists in South Ossetia risked harassment because of
    contacts with Georgian activists.

    Torture, ill-treatment and excessive force The government's two-year
    Plan of Action against Torture, which expired in December 2005, was
    not extended although many recommendations by a range of international
    human rights bodies remained unimplemented. These included
    recommendations made by the UN Special Rapporteur on torture and other
    cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment, the UN Committee
    against Torture, and the European Committee for the Prevention of
    Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Treatment or Punishment.

    In a positive move in April, parliament removed any time limit on the
    period in which charges could be brought for the crimes of torture,
    threat of torture, and inhuman and degrading treatment.

    Investigations were opened into allegations of police torture or
    ill-treatment in dozens of cases. Five officers were sentenced to
    prison terms of between three and seven years. Investigations were
    allegedly not thorough or impartial in at least some cases.

    ¢ 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. Levan Bukhaidze was abandoned and managed
    to get back to the city. Sandro Girgvliani died as a result of
    injuries he sustained and was found near a local cemetery the next
    day. 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, it was reported.

    In May the UN Committee against Torture called on the authorities to
    introduce regular monitoring by an independent oversight body of human
    rights violations by police and prison personnel; to strengthen
    investigative capacity to ensure allegations of torture or other
    ill-treatment were investigated promptly and thoroughly; and to
    promptly inform all detainees of their rights to counsel and to be
    examined by a medical doctor of their own choice. The Committee also
    recommended legislation on reparation for victims of abuse and in the
    meantime practical measures to provide redress, fair and adequate
    compensation, and rehabilitation.

    Investigation-isolation facilities and prisons

    In several instances, ill-treatment and excessive force were allegedly
    used against inmates of investigation-isolation facilities and
    prisons. However, only in the case of disturbances in Tbilisi in March
    was there an official investigation, which did not start until June
    and had not made its results public by the end of 2006.

    ¢ On 27 March special police and prison forces entered the
    Investigation-Isolation Prison No. 5 in Tbilisi to suppress an
    allegedly orchestrated armed riot and attempted break-out. The
    operation left at least seven inmates dead and many others wounded,
    including special forces officers. The same day President Mikheil
    Saakashvili and senior officials denied allegations that excessive
    force had been used. Unofficial reports suggested that the special
    forces had been sent in to suppress a spontaneous protest over abuses
    of prison hospital inmates by a senior prison official and special
    forces during the night of 26 to 27 March. It was also alleged that
    they did not attempt non-violent means to establish control, but
    immediately fired automatic weapons and rubber bullets and beat
    detainees with truncheons. Many of the injured reportedly did not
    receive adequate medical treatment. In some cases, doctors only
    obtained access to detainees following interventions by the Ombudsman.

    Violence against women in the family
    Violence against women by their partners and former partners included
    verbal and psychological abuse, physical and sexual violence, and
    killings. 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 authorities did not gather comprehensive statistics on domestic
    violence. A study by the non-governmental Caucasus Women's Research
    and Consulting Network reported that 5.2 per cent of women had
    experienced frequent physical abuse by their partner, adding to the
    data produced by UN Population Fund studies in Georgia in 1999 and
    2005 which found that 5 per cent of women reported physical abuse.

    Among obstacles to eradicating domestic violence were the widespread
    impunity enjoyed by its perpetrators, and insufficient measures and
    services to protect victims such as temporary shelters and adequate,
    safe housing. The authorities also failed to ensure a functioning
    cross-referral system between health workers, crisis centres, legal
    aid centres, and law enforcement authorities, or to provide mandatory
    government training programmes for police, procurators, judges and
    medical staff.

    The adoption by parliament in May of a new law on domestic violence
    was an important step in meeting the government's obligations to
    prevent abuses and protect survivors. The law introduced a definition
    of domestic violence in domestic legislation, and a legal basis for
    issuing protection and restraint orders. However, implementation of
    the provision for temporary shelters for victims of domestic violence
    was postponed until 2008. Also, a plan outlining measures and
    activities necessary to implement the law, which should have been
    approved within four months of the law's publication, had not been
    approved by the end of 2006.

    In August the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
    against Women was concerned that the provision of the new domestic
    violence law to set up shelters for women and children had been
    postponed, that there was a lack of official data on domestic
    violence, and that domestic violence may still be considered a private
    matter. The Committee urged that a national action plan to combat
    domestic violence be completed and implemented, and recommended that a
    properly resourced mechanism be given the necessary powers to promote
    gender equality and monitor its practical realization. It also
    recommended strengthening the protection of victims; data collection,
    research and evaluation of measures taken; training; and public
    awareness raising.

    Abkhazia and South Ossetia
    Freedom of expression at risk

    In June the mother of civil society activist Alan Dzhusoity was
    dismissed from her job as head mistress of a school in
    Tskhinval/Tskhinvali, 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. Several days
    later, Alan Dzhusoity and fellow activists Alan Parastaev and Timur
    Tskhovrebov, in a television discussion in Tbilisi, called for an
    independent South Ossetia, peace and dialogue between South Ossetians
    and Georgians, and acknowledgement by Georgia that the South Ossetian
    population had a right to self-determination. Eduard Kokoity, the de
    facto President of South Ossetia, subsequently summoned civil society
    activists and warned them against contact with Georgians.

    Death penalty

    South Ossetia continued a moratorium on death sentences and
    executions. Abkhazia had a moratorium on executions only. Two
    prisoners were on death row in Abkhazia. Reportedly, at least 16
    people had been sentenced to death in Abkhazia since the early 1990s.

    In June the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), in
    recommendations on the death penalty in Council of Europe member and
    observer states, stated that the death penalty should be abolished in
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and that all death sentences in Abkhazia
    should be immediately commuted to bring an end to the state of
    uncertainty suffered by prisoners on death row for years.

    AI country reports/visits
    Reports
    ¢ Europe and Central Asia: Summary of Amnesty International's
    concerns in the region, January-June 2006 (AI Index: EUR 01/017/2006)

    ¢ Commonwealth of Independent States: Positive trend on the
    abolition of the death penalty but more needs to be done (AI Index:
    EUR 04/003/2006)

    ¢ Georgia: Briefing to the Committee against Torture (AI Index: EUR
    56/005/2006)

    ¢ Georgia: Thousands suffering in silence - Violence against women
    in the family (AI Index: EUR 56/009/2006)

    Visits
    In January AI delegates met senior government officials and key policy
    makers in Georgia to discuss torture and other ill-treatment. In April
    an AI delegate conducted a research visit.

    Violence - Violence against women in the family (AI Index: EUR
    56/009/2006)
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