The FIDH deplores the absence of a significant will at the highest level of the Russian State to launch a political process that could lead to a peaceful end of the war .
The FIDH calls upon the EU to publicly condemn these situations, and engage Russia to respect the international Human rights instruments it is a party to.
Background Information
Increasing attacks on Human rights defenders
In a report released in September 2004, the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, a joint FIDH-OMCT programme1, denounced the impact of the strengthening of the Russian regime on human rights defenders:
On May 26, 2004, in a speech delivered to the Federation Council, the upper chamber of the Parliament, Vladimir Putin declared in his annual speech on the state of the Nation : "thousands of associations and civil unions exist and work constructively in [Russia]. However, far from all of them are concerned by the defence of the real interests of the people. For some of these organisations, the main objective has become to receive funds from influent foreign and domestic foundations, for others the aim is to serve dubious groups and commercial interests".
Downfall of the freedom of media
The right to freedom of the media, already severely bashed over the last years, was seriously violated on the occasion of the hostage-taking in Beslan. Journalists present in Beslan were prevented from relating the exact situation to the public or to the hostages’ families.
Two Russian journalists, Anna Politkovskaya and Andrey Babitski faced impediments while trying to go to Beslan.
Mrs. Politkovskaya, a journalist at the Russian daily Novaya Gazeta made two unsuccessful attempts on September 1 to board a flight at Moscow’s Vnokovo airport. On her third attempt, when she was allowed to board the plane, she felt bad ten minutes after having a tea. She was lead to a hospital of Rostov where doctors diagnosed an acute intestinal infection.
Mr. Babitski, a journalist at the Russian-language service of Radio Free Europe, was detained at Vnukovo airport when he tried to leave for Beslan on September 2, 2004. He was assaulted by two unknown men, consequently arrested, detained and convicted of hooliganism.
The editor-in-chief of the newspaper Izvestia was fired three days after having published an article on the Beslan tragedy.
Beside Beslan crisis, other violations of freedom of media were reported.
Thus, one of the very few journalists working for the western media in the North Caucasus, Yuri Bagrov, a regional correspondent for Associated Press (AP) and the US Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE), was prevented from covering 29 August presidential elections in Chechnya after Russian secret services (FSB) seized his passport during a search of his home on August 25, 2004. Without his passport, Mr. Bagrov was unable to leave Vladikavkaz, capital of North Ossetia, to travel to Chechnya for the presidential elections on 29 August or, later, to Beslan. On September 17, 2004, the prosecutor’s office in Iristonsky, North Ossetia, opened an investigation regarding his legal status. Mr. Badrov obtained Russian nationality and a Russian passport in 2003, in conformity with a ruling of a regional court. It is the validity of that decision that is now being challenged by the Iristonsky prosecutor’s office. On October 6, 2004, Mr. Bagrov was informed that he faced charges under Article 327 of the criminal code for "forgery".
Racist violence is dramatically increasing in Russia, including daily racism against foreigners and going to attacks and murders committed by violent nationalists and skin heads. A Vietnamese student of the Saint-Petersburg Polytechnic Institute was murdered on October 14, 2004. On October 13, 2004, in the neighbourhood of Moscow two Uzbek citizens were attacked. As the result of this attack one person died, and the other was hospitalised. On October 14, 2004, in Chita-city, a Chinese citizen was murdered. The full list of racist crimes is very long.
The situation in prisons continues to be of concern. As reported by local non-governmental organisations, law-enforcement bodies continue to practice tortures and ill-treatment of the inmates. In April 2004, a wave of protests and collective hunger-strikes engulfed the prisons of Tchelabinsk, Ural and Irkutsk. On May 6, the inmates of Irkutsk prison Sizo-1 started a hunger strike, which was followed by the inmates of two other Irkutsk prisons UK2727/15 and UK272/19.
Common practice of the Dedovshcina in the Russian Army raises great concern According to local NGOs such as Soldiers mothers of Saint-Petersburg, physical violence is commonly used against conscripts and soldiers mainly from inferior ranks: this is the phenomenon of dedovshcina. Thus, during the year of initiation, the superior soldiers practice a form of slavery on the young soldiers. These situations often lead soldiers to take a decision to run away which put them in the illegality. No effective practices of protection exist in such cases. In two years only, the « Soldiers Mothers » organisations received 1898 complaints from conscripts who were obliged to leave their units to be able to defend their rights to health care, right and dignity.
(1) Russia : Human rights defenders faced with the "Dictatorship of the Law" of 12 Octobre 2004








