Amnesty International Press Release
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, January 04, 2011
Amnesty International Calls for the Immediate Release of Russian
Activists Jailed over Freedom of Assembly Protest
Contact: AIUSA media relations office, 202-509-8194
(Washington, D.C.) – Amnesty International is calling for the immediate release of three Russian opposition activists detained in Moscow after a peaceful and sanctioned rally calling for freedom of assembly and later sentenced to administrative detention.
“Yet again, the Russian authorities have failed in their obligations to protect the rights to freedom of assembly, a right guaranteed by the Russian Constitution,” said Andrea Huber, Europe and Central Asia deputy program director.
Boris Nemtsov, a former deputy prime minister and opposition activists, Ilia Iashin and Konstantin Kosiakin were among about 70 arrested at the rally in Central Moscow on December 31, 2010, the latest in a regular series of rallies in the Russian capital demanding to uphold the right to freedom of assembly.
They were sentenced on January 2, 2011 to 15, five and 10 days of administrative detention respectively for allegedly failing to follow police instruction, despite eyewitnesses reporting that they had not obstructed police officers.
“We consider them prisoners of conscience detained solely for peacefully exercising their right to freedom of assembly and freedom of expression," Huber continued.
Amnesty International has also expressed concern at reports indicating that the trial failed to meet international standards of fairness. At the trial of Boris Nemtsov the judge did not grant his defense lawyers request to use video evidence that showed him being led away peacefully or to cross-examine two police officers.
The court reportedly based its guilty verdict on the statements of the two police officers and ignored the statements of thirteen defense witnesses. Some of the detained protesters also reported fabrication of the circumstances of their detentions by police officers.
“The Russian authorities consistently disregard the standards of fair trials thus turning them in kangaroo courts which dispense politically motivated sentences,” Huber said.
For nearly two years, pro-freedom of assembly demonstrators gather in Triumfalnaya Square, in the center of Moscow, on the 31st day of the month to highlight Article 31 of the Russian constitution, which protects the right to freedom of assembly.
In October 2010 the new mayor of Moscow Sergei Sobyanin sanctioned the protest for the first time. Another unsanctioned protest reportedly took place on the other side of the square.
Protesters called for freedom of expression and assembly and called for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to stand down. They also held placards calling for the release of prominent businessman Mikhail Khodorkovsky, an outspoken critic of the Kremlin who was convicted on December 27, 2010 of money-laundering.
More than 50 people were arrested at a similar rally in St. Petersburg, which had not been sanctioned.
Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning grassroots activist organization with more than 2.8 million supporters, activists and volunteers in more than 150 countries campaigning for human rights worldwide. The organization investigates and exposes abuses, educates and mobilizes the public, and works to protect people wherever justice, freedom, truth and dignity are denied.
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