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Russia police 'regularly torture' | Russia police 'regularly torture' |
(about 14 hours later) | |
Russian security officials are regularly subjecting detainees to beatings, rape and torture, a report by Amnesty International says. | Russian security officials are regularly subjecting detainees to beatings, rape and torture, a report by Amnesty International says. |
More than 100 cases were documented in a small number of regions, although Chechnya - where incidences are said to be much higher - was not included. | |
The report said in some cases convicted inmates were used to torture suspects. | |
Russia has not responded to the report, but authorities have previously acknowledged torture is a problem. | |
The human rights organisation also said suspects were regularly denied access to lawyers. | |
Amnesty accused state investigators of transferring suspects to inaccessible parts of the justice system such as prison colonies, blocking access for independent monitors and preventing publication of expert reports. | |
'Litany of horror' | |
Amnesty called on the Russian government to protect the rights of those in detention. | Amnesty called on the Russian government to protect the rights of those in detention. |
It's a litany of horror and has no place in any decent justice system Tim HancockAmnesty UK campaign director | It's a litany of horror and has no place in any decent justice system Tim HancockAmnesty UK campaign director |
"We are hearing horrendous reports of prisoners being tortured in police detention in Russia - beatings with fists, plastic bottles full of water, books, truncheons and poles, of suffocation, the use of electroshocks and of organised rape," UK campaign director Tim Hancock said. | |
"It's a litany of horror and has no place in any decent justice system." | "It's a litany of horror and has no place in any decent justice system." |
The report gave the example of Yekaterinburg, where it is alleged that at least 30 male suspects were systematically tortured in a block of the local prison between 2004 and 2006. | |
Convicted prisoners were allowed 24-hour access to suspects' cells, it added, saying that some victims mentioned a special room where suspects were raped. | Convicted prisoners were allowed 24-hour access to suspects' cells, it added, saying that some victims mentioned a special room where suspects were raped. |
Detainees were forced to sign confessions, which was an indication that police were coming under pressure to solve crimes, Amnesty said. | |
'Ploy by inmates' | |
The report documented 100 cases in 11 out of the country's 89 regions. | The report documented 100 cases in 11 out of the country's 89 regions. |
But it did not include Chechnya - where human rights groups have accused Russian and pro-Moscow Chechen security forces of widespread abuses - or examine other regions of the North Caucasus. | |
There has been no response so far from the Russian prosecutor-general's office. | |
The BBC's Russia analyst says the authorities have previously acknowledged that the use of torture is a widespread problem. Russian law does not explicitly criminalise torture. | |
But the authorities say many such allegations by inmates are simply a ploy to improve their custody conditions, according to the grani.ru website. |