MENU
Documenting
war crimes in Ukraine

The Tribunal for Putin (T4P) global initiative was set up in response to the all-out war launched by Russia against Ukraine in February 2022.

Similar articles

Torture continues in Ukraine’s prisons26 June is International Day in Support of Victims of TortureSupport for its victims means putting an end to tortureDoes the public have any control in Ukraine?Anti-terrorist units again beating prisonersThe Legal Aid Centre for Victims of Ill-treatment is expandingAround 2 thousand people received KHPG assistance during the Campaign against Torture and Ill-treatmentA brief description of the KHPG strategic litigations in the first half of 2021Seventh Periodic Report of Ukraine on Implementation of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or PunishmentA brief description of the KHPG strategic litigations in July–December 2020Expert opinion (Amicus Curiae) on the application and interpretation of the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights in criminal proceeding № 52017000000000361A brief description of the KHPG strategic litigations in January – June 2020KHPG Shadow Report to Ukraine’s Seventh Periodic Report on Implementation of the UN Convention against Torture and Cruel Treatment (2nd edition, revised & supplemented)A brief description of KHPG strategic litigations in July–December 2019Seventh Periodic Report of Ukraine on Implementation of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or PunishmentA brief description of KHPG strategic litigations in July – December 2018KHARKIV HUMAN RIGHTS PROTECTION GROUP. ANNUAL REPORT. 2017Mask show at the Odesa SIZOKHARKIV HUMAN RIGHTS PROTECTION GROUP ANNUAL REPORT 2016A brief description of KHPG strategic litigations for 2015

Ukraine’s reports to the UN Committee against Torture must be public

19.12.2007    source: www.unian.net
Among the main problems of the Ukrainian legal system in KHPG’s view are the use of confessions as grounds for convictions, cases of arbitrary deprivation of liberty and impunity of those guilty of torture

The Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group believes that Ukraine’s Fifth Periodic Report to the UN Committee against Torture on its implementation of the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment does not fully reflect the changes in legislation and practice over the last three years. The report was prepared at the beginning of 2004 and was not updated before being submitted last year.

At a press conference in Kyiv on 19 December KHPG Co-Chair Yevhen Zakharov stated that the report does not identify problems which exist in this area.

He said that this report as all periodic reports and similar are prepared by government bodies without public participation or discussion. He stressed that all such reporting to the UN, Council of Europe and other international organizations needed to be public.

As reported at the time, on 8-9 May this year the UN Committee against Torture reviewed Ukraine’s Fifth Periodic Report.  The UN encourages nongovernmental organizations to submit commentaries on these official reports, and indeed the shadow report submitted by KHPG this year was its third, following reports on the Third and Fourth Periodic Reports in 1997 and 2001, respectively.

Arkady Bushchenko, lawyer and KHPG programme coordinator pointed to positive changes and trends over recent years. He said, however, that certain problems remained of concern, namely, impunity in cases where torture has been applied, conflict over the functions of the prosecutor’s office which hampers the efficient investigation of cases of torture, and the use of violence against many in penal institutions.

“The main defects in the Ukrainian legal system are the use of confessions in legal proceedings as grounds for convictions. Cases of arbitrary deprivation of liberty are widespread; there is no strict system for registering individuals deprived of liberty, nor the key safeguards against ill-treatment recognized in international practice, namely free access to a lawyer, doctor and the possibility of contact with the outside world, as well as information about ones rights”.  Mr Bushchenko also pointed to the bad conditions in penal institutions. 

He believes that the KHPG report had a significant impact on the conclusions of the UN Committee. “I believe that on many issues the Ukrainian Government was unable to provide well-argued answers and prove that it had fulfilled its commitments on implementing the UN Convention against Torture

Oleh Martynenko, Adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs, noted a clear confrontation between government structures, including the MIA, and human rights organizations.

He stresses however that cooperation with the latter is the single effective way of overcoming the problem of the use of torture and ill-treatment by law enforcement or any other government bodies.

 Share this