Russia: Winter games Olympic torch throws light
on human rights violations
As the Olympic torch
arrives in Moscow ahead of the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, Amnesty International
is launching a worldwide campaign to highlight Russia’s increasingly deplorable
human rights record.
“The Olympic flame can throw light on the human rights
violations that the authorities would prefer to hide behind the celebratory
decorations. It is important that all those with a stake in the Games are aware
of restrictions placed by the Russian authorities on civil society and ordinary
citizens, and use their influence to oppose them,” said John Dalhuisen, Europe
and Central Asia Programme Director.
With the arrival of
the Olympic flame in Moscow and the start of its journey to Sochi on 7 October,
hundreds of thousands of Amnesty International members will stage a series of
events and protests worldwide.
Supporters from
Ottawa through to Puerto Rico, Warsaw, Paris, Brussels and Moscow are organizing
vigils, flash mobs and pickets in public places and in front of Russian
embassies to raise awareness about the range of violations to the rights to
freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly in Russia.
“The Olympic
fanfare and spectacular ceremonies will not hide the fact that fundamental human
rights are trampled over despite being explicitly guaranteed by the Russian
Constitution and international human rights treaties to which Russia is party,”
said John Dalhuisen.
Amnesty International campaign will highlight:
•
Three prisoners of
conscience, Vladimir Akimenkov, Artiom
Saviolov and Mikhail Kosenko, detained over a year ago solely for peacefully
exercising their rights to freedom of expression and assembly. In May 2012, they
were detained in Bolotnaya square in Moscow, amid the wave of mass protests that
followed much-contested parliamentary and presidential elections in 2011 and
2012. Thirteen people are on trial in Moscow in relation to the Bolotnaya square
protests, and several others are still awaiting trial in this case.
•
Legislation curtailing peaceful
protests imposes heavy fines on
organizers of demonstrations for violations of a restrictive list of rules and
regulations, often arbitrary applied. In 2013 more than 600 people were detained
in the course of 81 events in and around Moscow alone.
• The 2012 “foreign agents” legislation unleashed a clampdown on NGOs across the country,
including the inspection of Amnesty International’s office in Moscow. Court
cases brought about by the Prosecutor’s Office against NGOs have resulted in
hefty fines against several organisations and their leaders. Many more NGOs
across Russia have been issued with official demands to register as “foreign
agents” or face similar penalties.
• Homophobic legislation introduced in 2013 is used to restrict the rights to freedom of
expression and assembly of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and Intersex
people (LGBTI) and has already encouraged homophobic violence across Russia.
LGBTI events have been disrupted by counter-protesters and banned by the
authorities, with participants detained for promoting "propaganda of
non-traditional relations among minors”. Anyone breaching the law, including
foreigners, faces fines of up to US$3,000.
• The ‘blasphemy’ law introduced after the ‘Pussy Riot’ punk group staged a brief and
peaceful albeit provocative political performance in the main Russian Orthodox
Church in Moscow in 2011. Two of the performers are currently serving a two-year
prison sentence after a politically motivated trial: one of them, Nadezhda
Tolokonnikova, is on hunger strike and being held in solitary confinement after
complaining about prison conditions.
• The failure to effectively investigate the murders of
journalists and human rights activists.
Anna Politkovskaya was shot dead in 2006, but the mastermind of her killing has
never been identified. No one has been brought to justice for the killings of
Natalia Estemirova, Khadzhimurad Kamalov and Akhmednabi Akhmednabiev, amongst
others.
”The Russian authorities must not use the Olympic games
being played on TV screens across the world as a smokescreen behind which they
can abuse human rights across the country,” said John Dalhuisen.
“Any
attempts by the Russian authorities to use the Olympic Charter as a pretext to
prevent individuals or activists engaging more generally in legitimate and
peaceful demonstrations, would not only fall outside the prohibition envisaged
in the Charter, but also violate standards on freedom of expression, association
and assembly .
“The Olympic Charter prohibits demonstrations at Olympic
sites, but such measures should be exercised only at the sporting sites and
venues, and strictly for legitimate purposes. The Olympic Games are not a human
rights-free zone. The Games are hosted by a city, but they are also effectively
hosted by the country at large, and violation of fundamental human rights in
this country, as we see it in Russia, is unacceptable and must immediately
stop.”
“Everybody who holds dear human rights, everybody with a
stake in the Olympic Games, including those involved in organising and running
them, should speak out over violations of the rights to freedom of expression,
association and peaceful assembly.”
See
also:
Russia: Human rights activists:
Voices from the ground

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