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Grisly death fuels tales of Russian police torture

(Reuters) – Albert Zagitov had barely set up his new

fruit and vegetable stall at the bustling Volga market in the Russian city of Kazan when he was told by a stranger to pack up

and go.

Human rights activist Lev

Ponomaryov attends a news conference in Moscow, March 27, 2012. The news conference was dedicated to recent acts of police

brutality in the Republic of Tatarstan, including an incident in Kazan in which a suspect under examination presumably died

after officers sodomized him with a bottle of champagne earlier in March, according to local media. REUTERS/Sergei

Karpukhin

After he refused, he was taken to a police car and driven to a police station where he says four

officers took turns to hit him in the head and chest and threatened to rape him.

“As soon as we sat in the car, they

started behaving very cruelly, swearing at me and calling me names,” said Zagitov, a Russian born in the Tatarstan region of

which Kazan is the capital.

“The threats were real. I was full of fear and in shock that this was happening,” he told

Reuters, his words pouring out quickly as he recalled the events of last July.

He was freed six hours later with an

aching head, battered ribs and a charge of petty hooliganism.

But looking back at the encounter, Zagitov, a

33-year-old father of one, can count himself lucky to have survived.

Last month Sergei Nazarov, an unemployed man of

52, was detained at the same police station on the same charge. The day after his arrest on March 9, Nazarov was taken to

hospital with abdominal pains. He died less than 24 hours later.

Before slipping into a coma, he told relatives he had

been beaten by four police officers and sodomized with a champagne bottle.

His death has caused outrage across Russia

and sparked protests in Kazan, a more than 1,000-year-old city on the Volga River 750 km (470 miles) east of Moscow which

prides itself on tolerance of its diverse ethnic population and many religions.

Police have charged five officers over

the case, and investigators are re-opening previously “closed” cases where complaints were made, including

Zagitov’s.

PROBLEM FOR PUTIN

Nazarov’s death has put the spotlight on police lawlessness and brutality as

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin prepares to start a six-year term as president in May, increasing demands for him to carry out

reforms to strengthen the rule of law that have been demanded during four months of anti-Putin protests.

Angered by

Nazarov’s case, about 100 people chanted “shame on the police” at a protest on a recent Saturday in Kazan’s Freedom Square,

where well-maintained buildings including the regional government’s headquarters look down on a statue of Soviet state

founder Vladimir Lenin.

“Once we learned about what had happened in the Kazan police station, we understood that it

concerned all of us – in Moscow, in Krasnodar, in Chita and Sakhalin,” Lev Ponomaryov, a human-rights campaigner, told the

protesters.

“Because if no one is punished, these crimes will happen in other places. Indeed they are

happening.”

Pop music blared from a dark blue van parked nearby bearing the logo of Putin’s United Russia party, and

about 20 members of a pro-Putin youth movement gathered on another part of the square, hoping to distract attention from the

protest.

Relatives say Nazarov had committed no crime and did not know what the petty hooliganism charge was for

although the police, who have denied mistreating him, said he had been accused of stealing a mobile phone.

The

relatives have dismissed suggestions by the police that he was drunk and disorderly. Contacted by phone, Nazarov’s brother

declined to be interviewed.

TEST CASE

Kazan’s image for tolerance has been badly damaged. The city of more

than 1 million, which was conquered by Ivan the Terrible in the 16th century, has long portrayed itself as an example of

harmony between Muslims, Christians, Russians and Tatars.

The turquoise-tipped minarets of a new mosque and the

16th-century onion-domed cathedral inside Kazan’s white-walled Kremlin are meant to embody this mingling of

cultures.

In the historic city centre, modish coffee bars and a gleaming shopping centre stand alongside mosques and

churches, while the outskirts are dominated by Soviet-era high rise buildings and heavy traffic.

Kazan’s leaders like

to trumpet its independence from Moscow although Putin won 83 percent of votes in the March 4 presidential

election.

Yet the city felt the strong hand of Moscow when federal Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev fired the head

of the city’s Dalny police station where Nazarov and Zagitov were taken into custody and accused officers there of betraying

the force.

In addition to the five officers charged over Nazarov’s case, a federal investigative committee is

examining 28 other complaints against the Kazan police. The allegations include reports of torture such as sexual abuse,

beatings, electric shock treatment and forced confessions for invented offences.

Russia’s Public Chamber, an official

body that analyses draft laws, is examining a book by the regional interior minister, Asgat Safarov, in which he is reported

to advocate using the “most painful methods” to combat organized crime.

Nazarov’s death is seen by human rights

activists as a test case of how far the Kremlin and government are prepared to go to carry out promises to wipe out abuses of

power by the police.

“The issue of police torture has been huge in this country for many years now,” Tatiana Lokshina,

deputy director of the Moscow office of New York-based Human Rights Watch, said.

Only the glare of publicity sets this

case apart from many more across the country, rights activists say.

“This case has attracted so much attention because

the level of brutality, the level of atrocity, is staggering,” Lokshina said.

“The problem has been there for a very

long time. We want to make sure the official rhetoric, triggered by the nightmarish case in Kazan, results in concrete steps

towards improving the current situation.”

TALES OF TORTURE AND ABUSE

Svetlana Kolyakanova recounted how her

brother was “cruelly beaten” and tortured with electric shocks to his genitals, the palms of his hands and soles of his feet,

after being arrested in April last year by Kazan police.

“After we talked to him he cried and told us he could not

take any more. The whole day they had tortured him with electric shocks. He signed all the confessions they wanted him to

sign.”

Irina Muratova, a lawyer representing local victims, said the police used such methods to achieve a 100 percent

crime detection rate.

A Kazan policeman also told a Russian newspaper that the police used special methods to extract

confessions.

“If we know that a person is guilty but we don’t have proof for the court – a gun, a body or other

evidence – then harsher interrogation methods are allowed,” the officer, identified only as Yuri, told Moskovsky Komsomolets

newspaper in an interview.

The alleged ringleader of the abuse with bottles was a veteran of Russia’s war against

separatists in the Chechnya region of southern Russia which had left him with psychological problems, said Pavel Chikov of

human rights group Agora.

Other cases of sexual abuse against officers at the Dalny police station were long ignored,

rights activists say.

Oskar Krylov, a 22-year old administrator, says he was sodomised with a champagne bottle and a

pencil by Kazan police last October but his case was going nowhere before Nazarov died.

“I complained to the courts,

but until Nazarov no one paid any attention,” he told Reuters.

Tatarstan’s investigative committee has long ignored

people’s rights, Igor Vselov, a rights activist, said during the Kazan protest, where people gathered around a three-foot

(metre) high box of complaints to underscore this point.

“The investigative committee of Tatarstan represents the

interests of the government and big business,” he said.

The criticism is not only from the streets. Russia’s deputy

prosecutor general, Sergei Zaitsev, accused Tatarstan’s investigators of “serious shortcomings” at a meeting with the

region’s president and other senior officials on Monday.

His investigations had revealed 66 “hidden” crimes by

police, mostly theft, he told the meeting. He said he had received 417 complaints from citizens, 65 involving

violence.

Contacted for comment, a spokesman for Russia’s Interior Ministry said that an investigation was under way

which would show “what (happened), and who (was involved) and how”.

He added that the Kazan courts were dealing with

suspects, but declined to comment at greater length beyond Nurgaliyev’s public statements. The chief spokesperson for

Tatarstan’s ministry of internal affairs could not immediately be reached, and a subordinate declined to

comment.

MEDVEDEV’S REFORM ATTEMPTS

Dmitry Medvedev, Russia’s outgoing president, introduced a police law in

2010 that sought to tighten standards and weed out violent and corrupt officers.

But critics say the law did little

more than change the name of the force from the Soviet-era “militsiya” to “politsiya” – militia to police.

“More than

two years of reforms have not led to any qualitative changes,” said Natalia Taubina, director of the Public Verdict

Foundation, an organization that offers legal help to victims of human rights abuses by the police.

There have been a

few notable cases of action being taken against the police. The police chief of St Petersburg, Russia’s second city, was

fired this year after a 15-year-old detainee, Mikhail Leontyev, died in police custody.

But official figures show only

4,000 criminal cases were opened against police in 2010 although 125,000 complaints of violations were registered by

Russia’s Interior Ministry.

RALLYING POINT FOR OPPOSITION?

Opposition leaders say demands for police reform

are important for many Russians, and particularly those who took part in anti-Putin protests in Moscow that attracted tens of

thousands of people between December and March.

Although Nazarov’s death has prompted protests in Kazan, Rashit

Akhmetov, one of the protest organizers, said that official pressure had frightened people away. Students, he said, had been

told by their university not to protest.

“But people sitting in their apartments, they don’t sympathize with the

authorities. They sympathize with the people on the streets,” he said.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, has

dismissed suggestions there will now be a police shake-up. Talk of new police reform was “absurd”, he told current affairs

magazine Itogi.

“It is not worth the government rushing to begin a new reform without completing the last one,” he

said.

But Putin should be careful, opposition groups say, because combating police brutality is one of the issues that

could rally the disparate groups involved in the widespread protests sparked by alleged fraud in December’s parliamentary

election.

“The potential of civil society has grown dramatically in the last few months,” Taubina said.

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“Police reform – qualitative reforms, not cosmetic

reforms – is one point on the agenda that could unite many of these movements that have formed in the past few

months.”

(Reporting by Jennifer Rankin, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

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