13 January 2018, 05:07

Russia: Authorities Should Free Chechen Human Rights Defender Immediately

Civil Rights Defenders

January 10, 2018

On his way to work on 9 January 2018, Oyub Titiev, director of Human Rights Center Memorial’s Grozny office, disappeared. Seven hours passed before officials confirmed that he has been detained at the Kurchaloy road police station. He has been charged with unlawful drug possession and, if persecuted, faces up to ten years in prison.

“By all appearances Oyub Titiev’s case is fabricated as a revenge for his human rights work. We demand Russian authorities to drop charges, immediately release Oyub Titiev, and guarantee his safety. Russia’s international partners should keep a close watch on the situation and demand Russian authorities to free Oyub Titiev,” said Joanna Kurosz, Eurasia programme director at Civil Rights Defenders.

Oyub Titiev was detained by road police around 10.30 am on 9 January. He was later delivered to the Kurchaloy road police station in Grozny, the capital of the Russian republic of Chechnya, where he was kept incommunicado for seven hours before the officials confirmed his detention. The police claimed that they had found 180g of marijuana in his car and presented him with charges of unlawful drug possession. If prosecuted, he faces up to ten years in prison. Titiev denies the accusations.

Oyub Titiev took the lead of Human Rights Center Memorial’s Grozny office after the murder of Natalia Estemirova in 2009. Estemirova paid with her life for documenting the cases of torture, kidnappings and extrajudicial killings.

HRC Memorial has done extensive reporting about the grave human rights violations taking place in Chechnya over the years. The sustained, systematic, and grave abuses continue to be perpetrated in a climate of complete impunity. Over the past years, Chechnya’s regime leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, has intensified the persecution of anyone who expresses criticism or deviates in virtually any aspect of life. Punishment of the whole family and relatives, and public humiliation, often in front of TV cameras, is common. Last year, Novaya Gazeta and Memorial reported on dozens of extrajudicial killings of suspected insurgents and collaborators, and Novaya Gazeta exposed mass detentions, cases of torture, and killings of gay men.

Oyub Titiev’s case is strikingly similar to those of two other Chechen activists who were sentenced in retaliation of the work. Both the activist Ruslan Kutaev, and Caucasian Knot’s correspondent Zhalavdi Geriev, were imprisoned similar trumped-up drug charges. Kutaev, imprisoned in 2014, and Geriev, imprisoned two years later, were both tortured in custody.

Original statement: https://www.civilrightsdefenders.org/news/statements/russia-authorities-should-free-chechen-human-rights-defender-immediately/

All news
НАСТОЯЩИЙ МАТЕРИАЛ (ИНФОРМАЦИЯ) ПРОИЗВЕДЕН И РАСПРОСТРАНЕН ИНОСТРАННЫМ АГЕНТОМ ООО “МЕМО”, ЛИБО КАСАЕТСЯ ДЕЯТЕЛЬНОСТИ ИНОСТРАННОГО АГЕНТА ООО “МЕМО”.

December 23, 2024 23:43

December 23, 2024 21:47

  • Researchers name action motives and methods of Caucasian draft dodgers

    Researchers have found out how men who are in areas at risk of conscription and mobilization into the Russian Army, but would not take part in military operations, choose their life strategies. They have also compared the motives and methods of action of residents of Russian central regions with those in Northern Caucasus.

December 23, 2024 20:12

December 22, 2024 20:54

  • Russian SAM names conditions for permissible polygamy for Muslims

    As follows from a fatwa (a legal ruling on a point of Islamic law (sharia), – note of the “Caucasian Knot”) of the Ulema Council of the Spiritual Administration of Muslims (SAM) of Russia, polygamy is permissible for Muslim men in Russia, and a Muslim can be in a religious marriage with four women with fair and equal treatment of all his wives.

December 22, 2024 20:13

News archive