Posts Tagged ‘Matrosskaya Tishina’

21
April 2012

Updated Magnitsky Act Introduced in U.S. Congress

Ria Novosti

An updated bill imposing a visa ban and asset freeze on Russian officials allegedly linked to the death in custody of Russian tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, as well as on “individuals responsible for other gross violations of human rights” in Russia has been introduced in the U.S. Congress.

Magnitsky, who worked for Hermitage Capital, a British investment fund, died in the Matrosskaya Tishina pre-trial detention center in Moscow in November 2009, almost a year after being arrested on tax evasion charges. He suffered from untreated pancreatitis and gallstones. Two former prison doctors have been charged with negligence in connection with his death, but a criminal case against one of them was recently dropped.

Just days before his arrest, Magnitsky claimed to have uncovered a massive fraud in which Moscow tax and police officials had allegedly embezzled $230 million in tax rebates by taking over Hermitage subsidiaries and using them to claim tax rebates. His supporters say the legal case investigators launched against him was a means for the same security officials he had accused to muzzle him and stop his activities.

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08
July 2011

Russia’s Summer of Fire, Intrigue, Political Mystery: World View

Bloomberg
Is lightning striking twice in the same place? Kommersant has sounded the tocsin, warning that once again peat bogs around Moscow are burning: “According to the Ministry of Emergency Situations, on Sunday in the region around Moscow sixteen wildfires broke out simultaneously.”

Authorities said that the fires have been extinguished, but Kommersant quoted Grigory Kuksin, of Greenpeace Russia, who refuted the good news. “In the Gus-Khrustalny district alone, five fires are burning,” Kuksin said. “The situation in the region is bad. There aren’t enough resources to put out fires or even contain them.”

The bogs currently ablaze may prefigure a return of the catastrophic wildfires that last summer coincided with a record-shattering heat wave and raged for weeks, generating lethal smog that blanketed the capital, wrought billions of dollars worth of damage and, at least indirectly, caused tens of thousands of deaths.

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07
July 2011

Russia’s Medvedev sides with human rights activists on Sergei Magnitsky killing

Christian Science Monitor

Russian President Dimitry Medvedev surprised many when he backed a report blaming the 2009 fatality of anticorruption lawyer Sergei Magnitsky on prison brutality.

But Russian President Dmitry Medvedev appeared to do that Tuesday after being handed a scathing report, prepared by the Kremlin’s own human rights commission, that described the 2009 prison death of anticorruption lawyer Sergei Magnitsky as the work of prison guards who savagely beat him and doctors who refused to treat him. The report also blamed top officials for covering up the whole affair.

“The case of Magnitsky is a very sad case, for this man is dead, and in all likelihood, there were certain criminal actions that led to this result,” Mr. Medvedev said after meeting with the commission, an advisory body that includes some of Russia’s top human rights campaigners.

While the Kremlin commission’s advice is often ignored, experts say things might be different this time. The report given to Medvedev, which clashes sharply with the findings of an official investigation, not only describes the appalling conditions Mr. Magnitsky was subjected to but also names several prison officials and medical authorities who allegedly colluded in the abuse.

“Our report is no abstract document,” says Valery Borshchev, a former Duma deputy and coauthor of the report. “We name the people actually responsible for what happened to Magnitsky and cite the evidence that permits us to accuse them of corruption and other legal violations. We name the doctors who withheld medical assistance from him. We don’t name any top officials because their involvement has yet to be proven.”

Unlawful arrest, brutal detention

Magnitsky, a lawyer with the British-based Hermitage Capital, had filed a 2008 lawsuit alleging a $230 million tax fraud by a number of top Russian law enforcement officials. Within weeks, he was arrested by some of those same officials, charged with fraud, and taken to Matrosskaya Tishina, a notorious Moscow pretrial detention center.

A year later, Magnitsky died of heart failure in prison after apparently being denied medical treatment. The case, which seemed to exemplify the worst of Russia’s corruption-ridden justice system and violence-plagued prisons, attracted widespread attention. At the time, Medvedev promised a full investigation.

But the official inquiry presented Monday found no fault with prison officials and merely blamed unnamed doctors for not acting efficiently in his case.

“The experts identified deficiencies in the medical care given to Magnitsky during his detention, which may have prevented a timely diagnosis of his chronic illness,” a spokesman for the official Investigative Committee, Vladimir Markin, told journalists. “In this regard, he was not provided with timely and appropriate treatment.”

But the report given to Medvedev the next day by the Kremlin human rights panel provided evidence that Magnitsky’s original arrest was unlawful, that his detention was marked by beatings and possibly torture aimed at extracting a confession of guilt, and that prison officials instructed doctors not to treat him.

“It is clear that Magnitsky, who was in a critical state of health, was beaten in prison,” says Mr. Borshchev.

On the night he died “he was delivered to Matrosskaya Tishina in serious condition. But the doctor on duty, instead of treating him, allowed eight guards to take him into a small cell in handcuffs. The doctor also called an ambulance, but it was not allowed to enter the prison gates for over an hour. When [medical personnel] were able to enter, Magnitsky was already dead. It is a recorded fact that he had been beaten by truncheons,” he says.

“We insist that several members of the [official] Investigation Committee be made to answer for their conduct, as well as certain judges who abetted his illegal arrest, prolonged his detention and denied his relatives permission to visit him in prison …

“It is clear that the system swept down on Magnitsky and destroyed him,” he adds. “The lesson here is that a person is defenseless against the system.”
Signs of reform

Some members of the commission say that the fact that Medvedev has defied the official investigation and admitted that “criminal actions” played a role in Magnitsky’s death means that the system can be reformed.

“I think Magnitsky’s case is proof that our society, supported by the president, can force the system to be accountable,” says Kiril Kabanov, head of the official National Anti-Corruption Committee. “Right now we have a lot of other cases similar to Magnitsky’s, which means that what happened to him is not that unusual.”

He says there is a lot of institutional resistance to revealing and punishing abuses, and dealing with it will require a big push from the Kremlin.

“Officials tend to cover up and protect their workers [who commit abuse], and seem ready to accuse anybody else – even international conspiracies – for the allegations against them, rather than own up to the real state of affairs,” he says.

Another commission member, former judge Mara Polyakova, says reform will not be easy.

“This case spotlights all the defects of our law enforcement organs and courts which we’ve long known about,” she says. “The fact that the Magnitsky case has attracted such resonance is good, but don’t imagine all the vice we’re dealing with can be eliminated at a single stroke. The system itself is vile, and change will be a long, hard struggle.”

International pressure

Last month Russia’s top prosecutor, Yury Chaika, slammed the US Senate for introducing a bill, the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act of 2011, which would deny US visas and freeze the US-based assets of Russian officials accused of committing illegal reprisals against human rights activists. This week, the Dutch parliament unanimously passed a similar resolution.

“Investigative bodies and the Russian justice system are coming under pressure. I believe that this is unacceptable,” Mr. Chaika said.

But Masha Lipman, editor of the Moscow Carnegie Center’s Pro et Contra journal, says international pressure like that was probably a big factor in forcing Medvedev to make his public admission.

“What makes this case truly unique is the very diverse effort to compel the Russian government to investigate thoroughly, and not to let the perpetrators get away with it. The president was forced to say something he never would have said in public otherwise,” she says.

“Medvedev’s words suggest an effort by nervous Russian officials to try to soften their position, reconcile with the US, Holland, and other foreign countries. It’s a struggle, but the threat of sanctions against Russian officials, who like to stash their assets abroad and travel to foreign countries, is something that appears to be working,” she says.

“Now we must wait to see what happens next. Is this as far as Medvedev is prepared to go? People are waiting for more than words, they want to see something definitive, proceedings opened, charges laid against the perpetrators. That would be something,” she adds. онлайн займы unshaven girl female wrestling https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php https://www.zp-pdl.com hairy woman

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04
July 2011

Russia blames prison over top lawyer’s death

Agence France Presse

Russian investigators on Monday for the first time acknowledged that medical neglect was responsible for the death in pre-trial detention of Western investment fund lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.

The 37-year-old Hermitage Capital investment fund attorney’s death in November 2009 in a holding cell at Moscow’s Matrosskaya Tishina sparked outrage among international rights groups and drew condemnation from Western states.

His case came to symbolise both the perils facing Western businesses in Russia and the seeming gap between President Dmitry Medvedev’s more liberal rhetoric and his actual reform accomplishments.

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11
April 2011

The case of Sergei Magnitsky’s death

Lara’s Blog

In February 2011, the Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights appealed to the Polish government in reference to a case of Siergiei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer who died in a Moscow detention facility as a result of having been held in conditions, which could be justifiably called torturous. The Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights appealed to impose appropriate visa and financial sanctions on Russian officials responsible for his death.

Tuesday, 22 February 2011 Sergei Magnitsky was a Russian lawyer specialising in tax law who worked as a counsel for the Russian investment fund Hermitage Capital Management. Sergei Magnitsky was arrested on 28 November 2008 on tax evasion charges filed as part of the investigation launched against Hermitage Capital Management. Many observers believe that a document which formed the basis of the arrest warrant had been fabricated.

His arrest followed the unveiling by Sergei Magnitsky of one of the largest corruption scandals in Russia which implicated top-ranking Russian officials. On 5 June and 7 October 2008 S. Magnitsky voluntary testified in court accusing officials of defrauding the Russian treasury of $ 230 million. S. Magnitsky was arrested by the very officials who, according to his testimony, were implicated in the embezzlement.

On 16 November 2009 Sergei Magnitsky died in a Moscow detention facility as a result of having been held in harsh conditions and denied an appropriate medical care. He had been held in pretrial detention for almost a year before his death.

Sergei Magnitsky was initially placed in the investigatory detention centre “Matrosskaya Tishina”, where he was diagnosed with acute pancreatitis and provided with proper medical care. However, a week before a scheduled specialist examination and surgery Sergei Magnitsky was transferred to Moscow “Butyrka” Prison where he was held in conditions severely impairing his health. Also, he was deprived of appropriate medical care.

Sergei Magnitsky and his defence counsels submitted a number of complaints against intolerable prison conditions which were left unanswered by the prison authorities. The total number of complaints reached 450. The deteriorating state of Mr Magnistky’s health led to his death on 16 November 2009 during his per-trial detention. S. Magnitsky was never put on trial. займ срочно без отказов и проверок микрозаймы онлайн https://zp-pdl.com/best-payday-loans.php https://zp-pdl.com/apply-for-payday-loan-online.php unshaven girl

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27
October 2010

Mortality in Russian pretrial jails drops by 21% in 4 years

Interfax

26 October – Mortality among inmates in Russia’s pretrial detention centers has dropped by 21% for the past four years and makes up a little more than 20% of the general nationwide death rate, said the head of Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service, Alexander Reimer.

In an interview posted on the agency’s website, Reimer argued that, due to recent legislation allowing crime suspects who are in custody and suffer from serious diseases to be released, “the situation will keep improving.”

Mentioning the death in a Moscow jail in November 2009 of Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer for the Hermitage Capital investment fund, Reimer claimed that quite often the reason why detainees and convicts die is that they find out they are chronically ill after being arrested.

Magnitsky, 37, died at Moscow’s Matrosskaya Tishina prison on November 16, 2009. He was being held on charges of tax evasion. His death caused widespread public outcry. The Investigative Committee started an inquiry into his death on charges of “not aiding a patient” and “negligence.” But rights activists claimed that Magnitsky’s death had not been investigated in earnest.

Magnitsky said in court that his criminal case was a revenge for his blaming a law enfacement official for misappropriating budgetary funds. unshaven girls buy over the counter medicines https://zp-pdl.com/how-to-get-fast-payday-loan-online.php https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php hairy girl

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27
October 2010

Alexeyeva asks international community to react to Magnitsky death

Interfax

October 25 – Russian rights campaigners requested assistance during talks with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon in probing Hermitage Capital Foundation lawyer Sergei Magnitsky’s death at a detention facility.

“I said that if our authorities cannot punish the guilty, let the world community react,” a participant in the meeting, head of Moscow’s Helsinki Group, Lyudmila Alexeyeva, told Interfax.

The talks also dealt with problems which Russian civil activists get confronted with, including in organizing public actions.

Russian rights activists complained that it is much easier for them to meet with foreign representatives than with Russian officials, who invite civil activists very rarely.

Alexeyeva earlier told Interfax that although not everything is proper with human rights in the United States, the situation there is better than in Russia.

Magnitsky, 37, died at the Matrosskaya Tishina prison on November 16, 2009. He was being held on charges of tax evasion. His death caused widespread public outcry. The Investigative Committee started an inquiry into his death on charges of “not aiding a patient” and “negligence.” But rights activists claimed that Magnitsky’s death had not been investigated in seriously.

Magnitsky said in court that his criminal case was a revenge for his blaming a law enfacement official for misappropriating budgetary funds. hairy woman займ на карту онлайн https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php онлайн займы

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