RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2012. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
In Russia, Hotline Renews Hope For Victims Of Police Torture
By Tom Balmforth
MOSCOW -- Yelena Isaulova says she's lucky to be alive.
Two police officers in the southern Russian town of Pyatigorsk took the
then-46-year-old mother of two into custody, where she says they
repeatedly beat her head, arms, and legs while she was handcuffed.
Isaulova adds that her “glassy-eyed” captors would have tortured her to death if a third police officer had not intervened.
"My skin was scraped off, my hands were all bruised and beaten, and so
were my wrists because they hung me up by my handcuffs," she says. "Then
they drove me to the nearby river and said, 'We’ll smash your head in,
plant drugs on you, and throw you in the river and you’ll float away and
no one will ever come looking for you.'"
Six years have passed since that day, but there has been no investigation. Isaulova says her appeals have simply been ignored.
Nationwide Anger
Isaulova's horrific story might never have come to light were it not for
a new nationwide hotline based in Moscow that logs cases of alleged
police torture and provides legal support for victims.
Isaulova is among scores of Russian citizens who, in the space of three
weeks, have appealed to the Agora human rights organization, recounting
tales of police abuse -- some of them nearly a decade old. Many who are
now calling the hotline say they had previously feared filing official
complaints or were ignored when they did.
But that feeling of helplessness appears to be changing in the wake of the nationwide anger that erupted over the brutal murder in police custody of 52-year-old Sergei Nazarov in Kazan last month.
Since then, dozens of victims who have kept their grief, anger, and
shame quiet for years have been inspired to go public and seek support
from organizations like Agora.
Ilnur Sharapov of Agora says police torture has always been prevalent
but that the public’s passivity finally reached the breaking point when
Nazarov was tortured to death after allegedly being sodomized with a
bottle.
"This case was simply so cruel and awful," Sharapov says. "There was a
boil that had long been growing and growing and finally it burst.
Finally, society realized that there really is a problem with this."
Calls Pouring In
Sharapov, an ethnic Tatar lawyer who mans the phone in Agora’s small
three-person office in Moscow's upscale Chistie Prudy district, says he
has personally logged 88 concrete cases of police torture. He says he
has taken calls day and night from 31 Russian regions -- stretching from
Sakhalin on the Pacific coast to Krasnodar on the Black Sea to Murmansk
in the Arctic Circle.
In a sign of the success of the hotline, Sharapov says four regional law
enforcement bodies -- in Sverdlovsk, Kurgansk, Moscow, and Krasnodar --
requested that relevant information be sent to them.
A Moscow police spokesperson said investigators were "studying the statements" of those who have called the Agora hotline.
Additionally, on April 4, Agora handed 107 cases of alleged police torture to Investigative Committee chief Aleksandr Bastrykin.
If Sharapov establishes that a claim is valid, he requests that victims
send him documents and other evidence. If he has time, he gives brief
legal consultation himself and then forwards the documents to Agora’s
regional lawyers, who take the case from there.
Trends Of Abuse
If Agora has no local lawyers in a particular region, they dispatch a legal team on a temporary basis.
This was the case in Sverdlovsk Oblast in the Urals region, where Agora
logged 13 accusations of police abuse, according to Dmitry Kolbasin,
another Agora employee. The organization is sending a team of four
lawyers to the regional capital, Yekaterinburg, to consult with alleged
victims on a walk-in basis.
Sharapov says trends are already emerging that illustrate why police abuse is so prevalent.
Russian police officers are required to meet monthly quotas of arrests
and detentions, a practice that critics say results in officers forcibly
extracting confessions based on trumped-up charges.
"The majority of the people who have come forward said that they were
tortured so that they confessed to crimes they did not commit," Sharapov
says.
Local media and social networks are rife with such cases.
RFE/RL’s Russian Service reports
that three Moscow Oblast police officers are currently facing trial for
forcing a 48-year-old woman held in their custody to wear a gas mask
with closed airways in order to extract a confession.
In a YouTube video posted
on March 24, Sergei Medvesh, a resident of the town of Varenikovsky in
the Krasnodar region, describes how he confessed to taking part in a
murder after police raped him with a bottle.
Asked by the interviewer on the video if going public with these
accusations was frightening for him, Medvesh replies: “I am afraid....
Either they are going to plant drugs on me or I won’t make it home one
day.”
'Patience Isn't Endless'
Sharapov says, however, that factors other than quotas also lead to
abuse and torture. In some cases, police are simply trying to punish
detainees who are defiant or insubordinate. In others, they appear to be
exacting revenge.
Isaulova, the woman who was allegedly tortured in Pyatigorsk, for
example, says she was detained after she exposed a 140 million-ruble
($4.8 million) property scam allegedly involving police and lawyers in
which people were killed in order to steal their homes.
Regardless of the cause, Sharapov says public anger is boiling over. If
police abuse is not tackled seriously, he says, it could result in a
serious problem for the authorities. He belittles outgoing President
Dmitry Medvedev’s recent police reforms as little more than window
dressing.
"There is no result and this is worrying. How much are people able to
tolerate? How long is it going to go on?" he asks. "Our patience
obviously isn't endless. History shows the Russian people are calm and
peaceful like a bear, but if you wake them up, then you can't stop them.
This is a real danger. It is all leading to unpleasant consequences."