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Armenian Prison Conditions Again Deemed Inadequate

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  • Armenian Prison Conditions Again Deemed Inadequate

    ARMENIAN PRISON CONDITIONS AGAIN DEEMED INADEQUATE
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 5 2006

    Conditions in most Armenian prisons remain harsh and in some cases
    "inhumane" despite having somewhat improved since Armenia's accession
    to the Council of Europe, civil society representatives that regularly
    inspect them said on Thursday.

    Presenting its latest report, a monitoring team comprising
    representatives of a dozen non-governmental organizations and the
    Armenian Apostolic Church said the country's four largest prisons
    do not meet international standards and must be relocated to new
    buildings. The detailed report, based on the team's annual inspection
    of the Armenian penitentiary facilities also concludes that most
    inmates are poorly fed and not provided with adequate healthcare.

    Officials from Armenian Justice Ministry department running the
    prisons disagreed with that assertion, insisting that the prison
    population has free access to doctors and medicine and does not suffer
    from malnutrition.

    Members of the monitoring team painted a similarly bleak picture
    in their previous report released last year. It urged the Armenian
    authorities to do more to improve the plight of the convicts. Justice
    Ministry officials accepted much of the criticism at the time, but
    blamed the problem on a lack of funds.

    Armenia's penitentiary system was transferred from the police to
    the Justice Ministry jurisdiction in 2002 under pressure from the
    Council of Europe. The measure was followed by the passage of a new,
    more lenient Armenian Criminal Code that led to the early release of
    most of the country's 3,600-strong prison population.

    In a July 2004 report, the European Committee for the Prevention of
    Torture (CPT), a Council of Europe watchdog agency, said that although
    the Armenian prison conditions have since improved they still fall
    short of European standards.

    According to the Armenian prison monitors, mistreatment of prisoners
    is another serious problem. "While the police resort to violence to
    extract confessions from suspects [kept in pre-trial detention], in
    prisons violence is used as a punishment for disobedience and escape
    attempts," said Avetik Ishkhanian, a human rights campaigner and
    member of the monitoring group. "Sometimes beatings are very brutal."

    The group's latest report refers in particular to the alleged beating
    of five inmates of a maximum-security jail in the southern town of
    Goris where a riot broke out last April. Citing eyewitness accounts,
    the report says the riot was quashed by a special police unit sent from
    Yerevan. Security forces are also said to have also demonstratively
    burned the belongings of all prisoners' in retaliation for the protest.

    Also, recent reports in the Armenian press said that four men serving
    life sentences at Yerevan's Nubarashen prison were tortured and held
    in inhuman conditions following their unsuccessful attempt to break
    free last July. The men reportedly tried to kill themselves after
    being caught by prison guards. The prison chief denied the reports.

    "I'm not saying that such cases are numerous," Ishkhanian told
    reporters. "But they do happen and seem to have been frequent of late."

    Vaghinak Kocharian, deputy head of the Justice Ministry's prison
    department, admitted that prison guards "use force" against inmates,
    but said they do so only "in cases of emergency." "We have legally
    defined sanctions against unruly convicts," he said. "So have to use
    and will use force if necessary."
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