Russia: Abuses in Chechnya
Continue to Cause Human Suffering
(New York, January 29, 2003) —
Russia's ongoing record of serious human rights abuse in Chechnya impugns its
claim that the war there contributes to the international campaign against terrorism,
Human Rights Watch said in a new report published today.
The twenty-seven page report, "Into Harm's Way", comes as Sergei Yastrzhembsky,
special assistant to the Russian president, is scheduled to visit Washington
to give a presentation on Chechnya. Yastrzhembsky serves as the government's
chief spokesperson on Chechnya, and has frequently likened the armed conflict
in Chechnya to the global campaign against terrorism.
The report documents continuing humanitarian law violations committed by
both Russian and Chechen forces, as well as Russia's efforts to close tent camps
and return people displaced by the conflict to Chechnya.
Russian officials say they are contributing to the international campaign against
terrorism, said Elizabeth Andersen, executive director of Human Rights
Watch Europe and Central Asia division. "But the war in Chechnya
mostly contributes greatly to human suffering. The international community should
think seriously about whether it wants to be associated with this very
abusive war."
The Human Rights Watch report based on sixty-two interviews done during a December
2002 mission to the region, documents abuses by Russian and Chechen forces since
the October hostage crisis in Moscow. It condemns the hostage-taking as a violation
of international humanitarian law, and describes other abuses by Chechen
forces, including the December bombing of the main government building
in Grozny and a series of assassinations of civil servants. It also documents
extrajudicial executions and forced disappearances committed by Russian
servicemen in Chechnya in the aftermath of the Moscow hostage-taking.
"The situation in Chechnya remains perilous for civilians", said Andersen.
"This is a time for the international community to intensify its scrutiny
of the region, and to make sure that civilians aren't compelled to return there."
The report documents a pattern of threats and intimidation by Russian migration
authorities to compel approximately 20,000 displaced people to leave the
tent camps and return to Chechnya. "Russian officials say that
returns are voluntary", said Andersen, "but our research shows that
this is not the case."
Human Rights Watch found that officials have constantly harassed displaced persons
by threatening them with arrest on false charges and withdrawal of food allowances.
Particularly effective was the threat of cutting of gas and electricity supplies
during winter months. With alternative housing nonexistent or uninhabitable,
the unrelenting pressure amounted to forcible return and clearly violated Russia’s
obligations under international law.
In one case, Russia's efforts to close the tent camps were successful: the Aki-Yurt
camp, which housed some 1,700 displaced Chechens, was forcefully closed in early
December 2002. Migration officials dismiss security threats that people continue
to face in the conflict zone.
At the same time, the Russian government has persistently tried to curtail outside
monitoring of the situation in Chechnya. For several years in a row, it has
stopped key United Nations human rights monitors from visiting the region, and
on December 31, 2002, it effectively ended the operation of Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Assistance Group in Chechnya.
Human Rights Watch called on the Bush administration to continue to press for
an extension of the OSCE Assistance Group's mandate and to urge the Russian
government not to compel displaced people to return to Chechnya. It urged the
United States and the European Union to make this the centerpiece
of a resolution at the forthcoming session of the United Nations Commission
on Human Rights, which convenes in March.
Into Harm's Way: Forced Return of Displaced People to Chechnya is available
at: http://hrw.org/reports/2003/russia0103/
To learn more about Human Rights Watch's work on Russia and Chechnya, please
see: http://www.hrw.org/europe/russia.php