BBC News
Last Updated: Monday, 4 October, 2004, 13:29 GMT 14:29 UK
Belarus urged to halt executions
Some families have not been given relatives' bodies for burial (picture
Amnesty International)
The human rights group, Amnesty International, has launched a campaign
urging Belarus and Uzbekistan to stop using the death penalty.
It says they are the last former Soviet republics to still use the
punishment.
Amnesty said people in both countries were sentenced to death in unfair
trials, often after "confessions" extracted through torture.
It added that prisoners were often not told the date of execution and burial
places remained secret.
Neither Belarus nor Uzbekistan has released full statistics on the number of
people they execute by shooting.
In 2001, the Uzbek authorities said that about 100 people were executed
annually, a figure contested by Uzbek human rights groups who say that the
real number is double that.
Beatings
In Belarus, Amnesty says the number of people sentenced to death is thought
to have decreased to between four and seven each year.
Amnesty is concerned that the secrecy surrounding the death penalty, as well
as the conditions on death row, lead to immense suffering.
I do not know where Dmitry is buried. If I knew I would at least have a
place where I can go with my grief
Tamara Chikunova,
mother of executed prisoner
It says prisoners are frequently beaten by prison officials and held in
small cells with only limited and monitored contacts with the outside world.
"Honestly, they treat us here not like human beings but as if we were cattle
or small mosquitoes," said Uzbek prisoner Zhasur Madrakhimov in a letter he
managed to smuggle out before being executed in 2004, eight days after the
UN Human Rights Committee had urged the authorities of Uzbekistan to stay
his execution.
The impact on prisoners' families is also a concern for Amnesty.
Tamara Chikunova, whose son Dmitry was executed in 2000 in Uzbekistan, said:
"It is one of the worst things for me that I do not know where Dmitry is
buried.
"If I knew I would at least have a place where I can go with my grief and
where I can talk to him."
She has erected a symbolic gravestone for her son in a cemetery in Tashkent,
next to the grave of his grandfather.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, all the newly independent
states retained the death penalty.
Since then, nine have abolished it - Armenia, Azerbaijan, Estonia, Georgia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Turkmenistan and Ukraine - and four have
suspended it - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russian Federation and Tajikistan.
Last Updated: Monday, 4 October, 2004, 13:29 GMT 14:29 UK
Belarus urged to halt executions
Some families have not been given relatives' bodies for burial (picture
Amnesty International)
The human rights group, Amnesty International, has launched a campaign
urging Belarus and Uzbekistan to stop using the death penalty.
It says they are the last former Soviet republics to still use the
punishment.
Amnesty said people in both countries were sentenced to death in unfair
trials, often after "confessions" extracted through torture.
It added that prisoners were often not told the date of execution and burial
places remained secret.
Neither Belarus nor Uzbekistan has released full statistics on the number of
people they execute by shooting.
In 2001, the Uzbek authorities said that about 100 people were executed
annually, a figure contested by Uzbek human rights groups who say that the
real number is double that.
Beatings
In Belarus, Amnesty says the number of people sentenced to death is thought
to have decreased to between four and seven each year.
Amnesty is concerned that the secrecy surrounding the death penalty, as well
as the conditions on death row, lead to immense suffering.
I do not know where Dmitry is buried. If I knew I would at least have a
place where I can go with my grief
Tamara Chikunova,
mother of executed prisoner
It says prisoners are frequently beaten by prison officials and held in
small cells with only limited and monitored contacts with the outside world.
"Honestly, they treat us here not like human beings but as if we were cattle
or small mosquitoes," said Uzbek prisoner Zhasur Madrakhimov in a letter he
managed to smuggle out before being executed in 2004, eight days after the
UN Human Rights Committee had urged the authorities of Uzbekistan to stay
his execution.
The impact on prisoners' families is also a concern for Amnesty.
Tamara Chikunova, whose son Dmitry was executed in 2000 in Uzbekistan, said:
"It is one of the worst things for me that I do not know where Dmitry is
buried.
"If I knew I would at least have a place where I can go with my grief and
where I can talk to him."
She has erected a symbolic gravestone for her son in a cemetery in Tashkent,
next to the grave of his grandfather.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, all the newly independent
states retained the death penalty.
Since then, nine have abolished it - Armenia, Azerbaijan, Estonia, Georgia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Turkmenistan and Ukraine - and four have
suspended it - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russian Federation and Tajikistan.