The UN Committee Against Torture strongly criticized Russia in a report for failing to investigate widespread allegations of torture and stepping up intimidation and reprisals against human rights advocates and journalists.
The panel of 10 independent experts expressed concern at the discrepancy between the high number of complaints of torture and ill treatment that it received from detainees and the relatively low number of criminal cases opened by authorities in response leading to prosecution.
The report on Russia’s compliance with a 1987 treaty against torture and other degrading punishments also expressed serious concern about numerous allegations that detainees have been tortured to extract confessions that were then used as evidence in court, and at Moscow’s failure to ensure all detainees the right to a lawyer.
The committee called on Russia to take “immediate and effective measures to prevent all acts of torture and ill-treatment throughout the country and to eliminate impunity of those allegedly responsible.”
It pointed to the increasing intimidation, harassment and attacks against people and organizations monitoring and reporting on human rights.
The committee urged the repeal of a new law backed by Russian President Vladimir Putin that expands the definition of treason so broadly that critics say it could be used to call anyone who opposes the government a traitor.
It called for another new law backed by Putin requiring human rights organizations that receive foreign funding to register as “foreign agents” to be amended, saying the term “seems negative and threatening to human rights defenders.”
The panel issued the report at the end of a four-week session in Geneva, which included two meetings on Russia.
A high-level Russian delegation reported on a number of new treaties ratified by the government, its establishment of a committee to investigate crimes that is independent of the state prosecutor’s office and Public Oversight Committees to monitor detention facilities.
The UN committee welcomed the moves, but expressed concern about “the impartiality and effectiveness” of the Investigative Committee following reports that its head, Alexander Bastrykin, arranged for the abduction of the deputy editor of the Novaya Gazeta newspaper in June and threatened him with physical harm in retaliation for publishing a critical article.
It was not investigated by Russia and did not lead to any disciplinary action, the report said.
The panel also raised concerns about the independence of the Public Oversight Committees, citing reports of reprisals against committee members including the prosecution of Alexei Sokolov, a campaigner for prisoners’ rights.
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