Monday, 30 July 2012

21st-Century torture: life under Europe's 'last dictator'


Here is an article that I read in the Independent News Paper today and thought that it might be of interest. If I can find the video from Newsnight, I will add it to this.


Source: 30/07/2012 21st-Century torture: life under Europe's 'last dictator'
independent.co.uk/news/world/…/21stcentury-torture-life-under-europes-last-dictator-7986176.ht… 1/3

21st-Century torture: life under
Europe's 'last dictator'

The Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko
Getty Images

Opposition activists say two men executed for a bombing in Minsk in 2011 were forced to
confess under duress. In a special report, John Sweeney experiences the torture they may
have endured
John Sweeney
Monday, 30 July 2012
The secretary-general of Interpol, Ronald K Noble, may have thought he had little to fear
from the Belarusian mother whose son was shot dead after he and a friend confessed to
planting a bomb that killed 15 people on the Minsk underground system last year. But
Lyuba Kovaleva is fighting a campaign that has raised grave questions about Mr Noble's
judgment, and is lending weight to claims that the Belarusian secret police, the KGB,
planted the device, rigged a show trial and tortured confessions out of the two suspects.
The tale begins two days after the metro bombing in April last year. President Alexander
Lukashenko – routinely called the "last dictator in Europe" – announced on TV that, thanks
to a KGB investigation, two men had confessed to the crime. He said they would face "the
most extreme punishment". The men were Ms Kovaleva's son, Vlad Kovalev, and his
flatmate – the alleged bomber – Dima Konovalov.
A month later, Mr Noble, an American, arrived in Minsk and held a press conference where
he is said to have compared the metro attack to the bombing of London's transport
network on 7 July 2005. He called Mr Konovalov "a terrorist" and praised "the high
professionalism" of the Belarusian criminal investigation for solving the case "so quickly".
The trial of the two suspects began four months later. They were found guilty in November
and in March this year both were executed with a bullet to the back of the head. Mr Noble
has been accused by opposition figures in Belarus of abandoning the presumption of
innocence until proven guilty, leaving himself open to the charge of being Mr Lukashenko's
"useful idiot" – criticisms Interpol hotly disputes.

Dmitry Konovalov left, and Vladislav Kovalev in cages at their trial last September
Getty Images


In Vitebsk, three hours east of Minsk, I met Ms Kovaleva. A slight, frail woman racked with
grief, she said she was often watched by the KGB but that the coast was clear that day.
"The court has not a single piece of proof of guilt, not only of my son – who was dragged
into this – but also of Dima Konovalov, apart from Dima's confession, which he gave under
torture," she said in response to the official version of events – that the men had a fair
trial. "They were beaten to such an extent that when we were shown the video recording
of Dima being interrogated, he could barely speak. He could barely sit."
Opposition activists both inside and outside Belarus have claimed they were tortured at
KGB headquarters in central Minsk. The building is known as the "Amerikanka" and is said to
be named after a 1920s design for a Chicago prison. People who say they have been
tortured in the Amerikanka include the opposition figures Vlad Kobets and Natallia Radzina,
the presidential candidates Andrei Sannikov and Ales Mikhalevich, the poet Vladimir
Neklyayev, and others still in Belarus. They say that in December 2010, after a bitterly
disputed election, victims were forced to strip naked and stand in stress positions while
masked guards swished electric batons. Icicles hung from open windows and the
temperature outside was -20°C.

Mourners light candles at the scene of the Minsk metro bombing
Getty Images



As part of my investigation, I went to a freezer warehouse in North London to experience
it myself. I stripped off and stood in the Amerikanka stress torture position, described by
the opposition, for as long as I could bear. Opposition activists say they had to endure 40
minutes. I lasted 40 seconds.
In 2004, a European parliamentary report blamed the Lukashenko regime for the
disappearances of four political rivals and raised the possibility that they were killed by
death squads. Following an investigation by the BBC, it is understood that 30 more than
people, mainly gangsters and other undesirables, were killed on the orders of the state.
Mysterious suicides of political opponents are also common.
In the case of the Minsk metro bombing, Ms Kovoleva said her son and his friend never
stood a chance of a fair trial. "On 13 April at 9am on the radio, I heard Lukashenko's
announcement that the culprits had already been arrested, and that they would receive
the harshest punishment – they would be shot," she said. "He said the boys had been
interrogated and by 5am they had already confessed."
Mr Noble seemed unaware of the KGB's reputation for torture when he made his comments
in support of the Belarusian investigation into the atrocity last year.
"I can tell all the citizens of Belarus that this case was solved so quickly because of the
high professionalism of the police and officials in the Ministry of Internal Affairs and other
ministries, because of the technology and CCTVs that you have in place," he said.
He noted alleged fingerprint evidence, which led him to call suspect Dima Konovalov "a
terrorist".
According to Ms Kovoleva, it is not only the methods of interrogation used by the KGB
which raises questions about the fairness of the men's trial. She claims that the CCTV
evidence praised by Mr Noble was not credible. "The FSB [the Russian security service
which was invited to help with the Belarusian investigation] analysed it for the court and
said it was edited," she said. "The FSB also found that the photograph of the man with the
bag in the metro, and Dima, were not the same height or complexion."
Ms Kovoleva explained that the man with the bag and Mr Konovalov were different people
and at the trial there were three bags of different colour, size and weight. She said:
"Where exactly the bag was, the court could not establish – or, indeed, whether there
was a bag at all. [There was] no piece of the bag, or fragment of a lock or metal. If there
was a bag, no remains of [it] were found in the remains of the explosion."
Closer scrutiny of the CCTV footage endorsed by Mr Noble, filmed minutes before the
bombing at 5.56pm on 11 April 2011, reinforces these questions. When the bomber enters
the metro, it is not clear whether it is Mr Konovalov or someone completely different. The
person is carrying a black bag with a white mark on it. Five minutes later, the mark is no
longer there.
State prosecutors claimed that Mr Konovalov was present when the bomb went off but,
according to Ms Lyubov, no particles from the explosion were found on either suspect. The
state also said he had walked back to his flat by 6pm – a journey of four minutes. I walked
it, and it took me 26 minutes.
Natalia Koliada, co-founder of the Belarus Free Theatre, is an opposition activist who was
herself locked up by the KGB and now lives in exile in London. She not only believes that
the two defendants were innocent, but blames the secret police.
"This was a KBG bomb," she said. "There are no facts whatsoever to prove something
else."
Mr Noble was not available for interview yesterday. A spokesman for Interpol denied that
the presumption of innocence was breached in the case and disputed my conclusions
about the evidence.
It said in a statement: "Ronald K Noble, Interpol secretary-general, concluded that the
Belarusian criminal investigation was professionally conducted and that the arrests of
Dmitry Konovalov and Vladislav Kovalev solved the case of who was criminally responsible
for the bombing.
"Secretary-general Noble stands by that statement today … Advancing one-sided false

claims about murderous terrorist conduct can only undermine public confidence in the
media."

Lyubov Kovaleva, mother of Vladislav Kovalev, one of the two men executed for the attack
Getty Images


Meanwhile, Lyubov Kovoleva says that the state refuses to tell her where her executed
son lies buried. "They are torturing me still," she said.
Opposition victims
Ales Mikhalevich
The lawyer-turned-opposition politician languished in Amerikanka for two months after KGB
agents arrested him following protests against the election in December 2010 in Minsk. He
was released in February 2011 but only after he signed a statement saying he would cooperate with the KGB and tell no one about what happened to him. He later retracted the
statement and claimed to have been tortured.
Vladimir Neklyaev
According to witnesses, the poet was beaten severely at about the time of the election
protests in 2010. He was taken to hospital but his injuries did not prevent KGB agents from
reportedly bundling him out of his hospital bed in a blanket. He was taken to the
Amerikanka and not heard from for eight days.

John Sweeney in the stress position allegedly used as a torture method by Belarusian security services

John Sweeney's report 'Torture In The 21st Century', will be broadcast on BBC Radio 4 at
11am today and on BBC2's 'Newsnight' programme at 10.30pm. His e-book, 'Big Daddy:
Lukashenka, Tyrant of Belarus' is published by Silvertail Books


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