(Washington, D.C.) -- Amnesty International
today called for urgent reforms within the Ukrainian police ahead of the
Euro 2012 soccer competition, in the wake of the robbery and severe beating
of two men by six officers in Lviv on April 21.
With only 38 days to go until Euro 2012 kicks
off, Amnesty International urges the Ukrainian government to publically
commit to creating an independent body to investigate complaints of police
abuse, sending a clear message that rights abuses will no longer be tolerated.
"The Ukrainian government must take
action now to stop widespread police criminality," said John Dalhuisen,
director for Europe and Central Asia at Amnesty International. "Failure
to do so will encourage police to continue acting as a law unto themselves,
and put Euro 2012 fans in danger."
Ihor Savchyshyn and Andrei Semenyuk were
arrested following a disagreement in a bar, and CCTV footage shows the
men being robbed by six officers of $2,075.
The police also subjected the men to a brutal
assault in which they were punched, kicked, sprayed with tear gas and then
handcuffed. Police repeatedly struck the pair with batons as they lay restrained
on the floor.
The men were taken to Sykhivskiy police station
at 6 a.m. and kept in custody, without medical care or access to a lawyer,
for 12 hours. Following their released, the pair were taken by ambulance
to a nearby hospital, as neither was able to walk. No explanation was given
for their detention.
Local prosecutors refused to open a criminal
case against the officers until the victims' lawyer gave an interview to
a local television channel. Five of the policemen were arrested on April
25. The other officer admitted himself to the hospital the same day, claiming
that he had been injured by the two men days earlier.
"This case is yet another example of
how the current system allows criminal behavior by police officers to go
unchecked in Ukraine -- the authorities only took action when the media
became involved," said Dalhuisen. "The country desperately needs
a new and robust system for investigating crimes by police."
In a briefing released today on human rights
violations in Ukraine, Ukraine: Euro 2012 Jeopardized by Criminal Police
Force, Amnesty International documents numerous cases in Euro 2012
host cities in which police have tortured people in an attempt to extort
money, extract a confession, or simply due to the victims' sexuality or
ethnic origin.
"Our government claims to be striving
toward European human rights standards, but officials live on a different
level," said Andriy Golod, the lawyer representing Ihor Savchyshyn
and Andrei Semenyuk. "They think they can do what they like with people."
During the 2012 UEFA European Football Championship
between June 8 and July 1, 11 matches will be played in four Ukrainian
cities, and tens of thousands of football fans will visit the country.
Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning
grassroots activist organization with more than 3 million supporters, activists
and volunteers in more than 150 countries campaigning for human rights
worldwide. The organization investigates and exposes abuses, educates and
mobilizes the public, and works to protect people wherever justice, freedom,
truth and dignity are denied.
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