Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Amnesty Int'l: Europe and Central Asia Regional Overview

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Amnesty Int'l: Europe and Central Asia Regional Overview

    Amnesty International
    May 26 2004

    AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

    External Document

    AI Index: POL 10/013/2004 (Public)
    News Service No: 122
    26 May 2004

    Embargo Date: 26 May 2004 09:00 GMT


    Europe and Central Asia Regional Overview
    Covering events from January to December 2003

    Governments across Europe and Central Asia continued to use the
    so-called "war on terror" to undermine human rights in the name of
    security. Among the steps taken by governments were regressive moves
    on "anti-terrorist" legislation, attacks on refugee protection, and
    restrictions on freedom of association and expression. Simplistic
    rhetoric about security, immigration and asylum, together with an
    upsurge in populism, bolstered racism and discriminatory practices
    towards minorities across the region. The lack of political will
    shown by the European Union (EU) to confront human rights violations
    within its own borders was increasingly disturbing, particularly in
    light of the planned accession of 10 new member states in 2004. Those
    responsible for violations, including torture or ill-treatment,
    continued to enjoy impunity.

    'War on terror'

    Under the auspices of combating "terrorism" governments continued to
    undermine human rights in law and practice. By the end of the year,
    14 foreign nationals who could not be deported remained interned in
    the United Kingdom (UK) under legislation that allowed for indefinite
    detention without charge or trial, principally on the basis of secret
    evidence. Those detained in the UK under "anti-terrorism" legislation
    were held in high-security facilities under severely restricted
    regimes.

    Spain continued to ignore long-standing recommendations by various
    international bodies to introduce greater safeguards for suspects
    held under "anti-terrorist" legislation, and indeed planned to more
    than double the time which certain people could be held
    incommunicado. The authorities also closed the only entirely
    Basque-language newspaper and 10 people associated with it were held
    under "anti-terrorist" legislation in moves that appeared to be
    injurious to the right to freedom of expression.

    The authorities in Uzbekistan used the "war on terror" to justify a
    continuing clampdown on religious and political dissent. At least
    6,000 political prisoners remained in jail there and members of
    independent Islamic congregations were among those who faced
    detention and intimidation. In Turkmenistan, a wave of repression
    continued, following an alleged assassination attempt in November
    2002 on the President, with scores of 198 people convicted after
    blatantly unfair trials amid credible allegations of torture and
    ill-treatment.

    Government efforts to limit asylum provisions and immigration
    benefited from the new language of "national security" and
    "counter-terrorism", with an emphasis on control rather than
    protection. In Italy, for example, there were fears that some
    asylumseekers were forced to return to countries where they risked
    grave human rights violations and that some individuals, expelled on
    grounds that they posed a danger to national security and public
    order, had no opportunity to challenge the decision in fair
    proceedings. The human rights perspective remained lacking from the
    thinking of the EU on asylum, which continued to promote a further
    sealing off of the EU at the expense of international protection
    obligations.

    Racism

    Racism, discrimination and intolerance, including anti-Semitism and
    Islamophobia, continued to be a major concern across the region.
    Manifestations included institutional racism in the spheres of
    economic, social and cultural rights.

    Discrimination against Roma was widespread in many states in the
    region, often affecting virtually all areas of life including access
    to education, housing, employment and social services. Many people
    seeking to return home after being displaced by war in the western
    Balkans faced discrimination on ethnic grounds, particularly with
    regard to accessing employment, education and health care. This acted
    as a barrier against the return and reintegration of minorities.
    Racist application of citizenship laws in the Russian Federation
    meant that certain ethnic minority groups - including members of the
    Meskhetian population inone region - remained effectively stateless,
    and as such were denied access to pensions, child benefits and higher
    education.

    Racism continued as a backdrop to human rights abuses by law
    enforcement officials in the administration of justice. Reports of
    race-related illtreatment by law enforcement officials came from a
    distressingly wide range of states, including Belgium, Bulgaria,
    France, Greece, Italy, Poland, the Russian Federation, Slovakia,
    Slovenia and Spain. There was also a lack of due diligence by some
    states in investigating and prosecuting assaults by private actors on
    minorities, ethnic as well as religious. In Georgia, for example,
    religious minorities continued to face harassment, intimidation and
    violent attacks, while the police failed to provide adequate
    protection for those targeted or show vigour in prosecuting those
    allegedly responsible.

    Lack of human rights protection

    Torture and ill-treatment were reported from across the region,
    including in Albania, Moldova, Romania and Serbia and Montenegro,
    where reports of such treatment were common and credible. In Turkey,
    torture and ill-treatment in police detention remained a matter of
    grave concern, despite some positive legislative reforms. In Germany,
    an intense public debate on the permissible use of torture occurred
    after it emerged that a senior police officer had ordered a
    subordinate to use force against a criminal suspect. Some states,
    such as Belgium, Italy and Switzerland, lacked fundamental safeguards
    against ill-treatment in police custody.

    In other states, such as Greece, Macedonia, Portugal and Spain, there
    were reports of reckless or excessive use of firearms, sometimes
    resulting in deaths. In several countries, conditions in prisons as
    well as in detention facilities holding asylum-seekers and
    unauthorized immigrants, were cruel and degrading. In some states,
    people with mental disabilities were treated inhumanely - in social
    care homes in Bulgaria, and through the use of cage beds in the Czech
    Republic, Hungary and Slovakia. Many states lacked independent
    scrutiny mechanisms to address such violations, a problem compounded
    by the continued failure to accept accountability at EU level for
    human rights observance by member states.

    In some states impunity for human rights violations continued. In
    Turkey, the ratio of prosecutions of members of the security forces
    to complaints of torture and ill-treatment filed by members of the
    public continued to be pitifully low. Russian Federation security
    forces continued to act with virtual impunity in the conflict in the
    Chechen Republic, amid ongoing reports of their involvement in
    torture and "disappearances". Continued impunity for wartime
    violations remained a concern in the western Balkans. Although some
    people suspected of war crimes were transferred to the custody of the
    International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, others
    continued to evade arrest, some apparently protected by authorities
    in Bosnia- Herzegovina, Croatia and Serbia and Montenegro. Thousands
    of "disappearances" that occurred during the 1992-1995 war remained
    unresolved. Although there were some domestic prosecutions for war
    crimes, lack of political will and deficiencies in the domestic
    justice systems led to continued widespread impunity.

    In Belarus, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, dissent from official
    policies in civic, religious and political life was systematically
    and often brutally repressed. Human rights defenders in a number of
    countries faced threats and detention, including in Turkey where a
    range of laws and regulations was used to frustrate their activity,
    and in Azerbaijan where a campaign by the state-sponsored media
    against several prominent human rights defenders culminated in
    violent attacks on their offices and raised fears for their safety
    and that of their families. In both these countries, as well as in
    other states such as Italy, Greece and Switzerland, police were
    reported to have used excessive force against demonstrators.

    The lack of effective redress for human rights violations in
    countries in Europe compounded concerns about proposals under
    consideration which Amnesty International Report 2004 would have the
    effect of curtailing redress available at the regional level in the
    European Court of Human Rights. Member states of the Council of
    Europe proposed adding new admissibility criteria to the only
    international human rights court where individuals enjoy the right of
    direct petition.

    Violence against women

    Human rights violations against women and girls continued across the
    region. In the context of trafficking and forced prostitution, there
    were concerns that victims were being failed by the judicial systems
    in source, transit and destination countries. Domestic violence was
    also an entrenched problem across Europe and Central Asia, from
    Belgium to the Russian Federation. Contributory factors included
    states regarding domestic violence as belonging to the "private
    sphere"; a lack of legal provisions in some states specifically
    prohibiting or criminalizing domestic violence; a lack of specialist
    police units and training; insufficient provisions to provide
    protection to victims; and court decisions which did not always
    reflect the gravity of such offences.

    Death penalty

    There were some positive moves on the death penalty during the year.
    Armenia abolished capital punishment in peacetime, Kazakstan
    announced a moratorium on executions pending legislation on
    abolition, and Kyrgyzstan maintained its moratorium on executions.
    Tajikistan, while retaining the death penalty, reduced its scope.
    However, in recent years Tajikistan and the two other retentionist
    states in the region, Belarus and Uzbekistan, have continued to carry
    out executions. The level of executions was believed to be
    particularly high in Uzbekistan, where scores of people have been
    executed in recent years after unfair trials, frequently amid
    allegations of torture, and with corruption an integral part of the
    investigation, trial and appeal in such cases. In Belarus, Tajikistan
    and Uzbekistan, the clemency process and executions themselves were
    shrouded in secrecy, compounding the punishment inflicted not only on
    the prisoners but also on their families. Executions took place in
    secret, with family members and friends denied the chance to say
    goodbye; in many cases families were not told for months whether
    their relative was alive or had been executed. They were also not
    told where their loved one was buried. None of these three countries
    published comprehensive statistics on their use of the death penalty.


    Action for human rights

    Although human rights remained under attack across the region, action
    to promote and protect fundamental rights continued. Many voices
    highlighted that human rights and security are not incompatible, but
    indivisible and interdependent. Human rights defenders continued
    their work despite harassment, intimidation and detention. Social
    movements responded to a range of human rights concerns in the
    region, bringing together activists across borders, with forums such
    as the Second European Social Forum in Paris, France, in November
    providing opportunities for regional coordination of popular
    activism. Strong regional intergovernmental bodies, including the
    Council of Europe and the Organization for Security and Co-operation
    in Europe, continued to play key roles in promoting and protecting
    human rights. 200 Amnesty International Report 2004.



    Public Document
    ****************************************
    For more information please call Amnesty International's press office
    in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566
    Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW. web:
    http://www.amnesty.org

    For latest human rights news view http://news.amnesty.org

    http://news.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGPOL100132004

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X