Moldova

Europe moves to protect trafficked people | Amnesty International
1 February 2008

Europe has taken a further step towards protecting people who have beentrafficked with the entry into force of a new convention.

Story      

Europe and Central Asia: Summary of Amnesty International’s ...
1 December 2007

This bulletin contains information about Amnesty International’s main concerns in Europe and Central Asia between January and June 2007. Not every country in the ...

Report       EUR 01/010/2007

Moldova: Urgent measures needed to stop torture or other ill ...
23 October 2007

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PRESS RELEASE. AI Index: EUR 59/006/2007 (Public). News Service No: 194. Embargo Date: 23 October 2007 00:01GMT. Moldova: ...

Press Release       EUR 59/006/2007

Moldova: Urgent measures needed to stop torture or other ill ...
23 October 2007

Torture and ill-treatment in Moldova remain widespread and systemic despite some initial legislative steps made by the government to change police practices in ...

Press Release      

Moldova: Police torture and ill-treatment: "It's just normal."
23 October 2007

Moldova is failing to fulfil its obligations under international human rights law to ensure individuals' right to freedom from torture and other cruel, inhuman ...

Report       EUR 59/002/2007

Moldova (Self-proclaimed Dnestr Moldavian Republic): Further ...
26 June 2007

Valentin Besleag was released from police detention on 17 June. He was reportedly not beaten in detention, but was held in an overcrowded cell with bad ventilation ...

Urgent Action       EUR 59/003/2007

Moldova (Self-proclaimed Dnestr Moldavian Republic): Possible ...
11 June 2007

Valentin Besleag, aged 59, from Corjova village in the Dubasari region of the self-proclaimed Dnestr Moldavian Republic (DMR), has been detained at the police ...

Urgent Action       EUR 59/001/2007

Moldova | Amnesty International
23 May 2007

Region      

Moldova: Freedom of expression under attack
11 September 2006

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PRESS RELEASE. AI Index: EUR 59/007/2006 (Public). News Service No: 234. 11 September 2006. Moldova: Freedom of expression under attack. ...

Press Release       EUR 59/007/2006

Moldova abolishes the death penalty in law
5 July 2006

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. Public Statement. AI Index: EUR 59/006/2006 (Public). News Service No: 174. 5 July 2006. Moldova abolishes the death penalty in law. ...

Press Release       EUR 59/006/2006

Taken from the Amnesty International Report 2007

Head of state: Vladimir Voronin
Head of government: Vasile Tarlev
Death penalty: abolitionist for all crimes
International Criminal Court: signed

Torture and ill-treatment were widespread and conditions in pre-trial detention were poor. A number of treaties protecting women's rights were ratified, but men, women and children continued to be trafficked for forcible sexual and other exploitation and measures to protect women against domestic violence were inadequate. Constitutional changes to abolish the death penalty were made. Freedom of expression was restricted and opposition politicians were targeted.

Torture and ill-treatment

In its report published in February, following a visit in 2004, the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) found that torture and ill-treatment was still widespread in Moldova and that important safeguards for the prevention of torture were not observed.

The European Court of Human Rights ruled in three cases that Moldova had violated Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. In one of these, the Court decided that the General Prosecutor's Office had failed to conduct an effective investigation into the torture allegations of Mihai Corsacov and, by refusing to open a case against the police officers concerned, had deprived him of an effective remedy against the ill-treatment he had suffered during his arrest in 1998. Reports of widespread torture and ill-treatment continued during the year.

• Vitalii Colibaba was arrested in Chiôinäu on 21 April, accused of injuring a policeman during a brawl. He was allegedly suspended from a crowbar and beaten on the head and neck by three police officers until he lost consciousness. Vitalii Colibaba was not granted access to a lawyer until six days after his arrest, and was allegedly beaten as a punishment when the lawyer wrote a complaint to the Prosecutor's office. A forensic examination carried out in the presence of the three officers who had allegedly tortured him found no evidence of ill-treatment. Vitalii Colibaba was released on bail in May and charges against him were still pending at the end of the year.

• On 18 January, the Prosecutor's office turned down a request to start criminal proceedings against police officers suspected of torturing Sergei Gurgurov in Rîscani district in Chiôinäu in October 2005, after he was detained in connection with the theft of a mobile phone. In April 2006, Sergei Gurgurov was again detained for violating his bail conditions, although his lawyer had explained that he was unable to attend the police station because he was undergoing medical treatment for injuries sustained when he was tortured. On 12 May, the Chiôinäu appeal court ruled that his detention had been illegal.

Harassment of lawyers

In June, lawyers Ana Ursachi and Roman Zadoinov, who had worked closely with AI on the cases of Vitalii Colibaba and Sergei Gurgurov, were informed that they would face criminal prosecution for spreading false information about human rights violations in Moldova and damaging the country's international image. In a letter to the Bar Association, the Prosecutor General's Office stated that the two lawyers could face prosecution under Article 335 of the Criminal Code for "misuse of official position" which carries a maximum prison sentence of five years.

Inhumane conditions in pre-trial detention centres

Reporting on its 2004 visit, the CPT described conditions in places of detention run by the Ministry of the Interior as "disastrous" and stated that in many cases the conditions amounted to inhuman or degrading treatment.

During the year AI expressed concern at conditions in the cells at the police Commissariat in Orhei. Located in the basement, they were intended to hold four detainees, but reportedly there were usually seven or more. Ventilation was poor and cells were infested with fleas and lice. Many detainees suffered from skin diseases but were rarely given access to a doctor. Toilet facilities amounted to a bucket for use in the cell in full view of others. Detainees were reportedly forced to sleep in turns, on a brick platform and without blankets, sheets or a mattress.

Violence against women

On 28 February, Moldova ratified the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, and on 19 May it ratified the Council of Europe's Convention against Trafficking in Human Beings, the first country to do so. In February a draft law on preventing and combating violence in the family was presented to parliament. It did not provide adequate measures to protect victims or prosecute perpetrators.

In August, the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women considered Moldova's second and third periodic reports. It expressed concern at the level of domestic violence against women and the increasing trend of trafficking in young women and girls, and the lack of protection for victims. The Committee recommended that the draft law on preventing and combating domestic violence should be passed with some amendments.

Freedom of expression

There was concern about the apparent lack of respect by the Moldovan authorities for freedom of expression.

• On 28 April, the Mayor of Chiôinäu refused an application by the non-governmental organization (NGO) GenderDoc-M, to hold a Gay Pride rally in Chiôinäu on the grounds that religious groups had announced that they would organize protest actions if the rally went ahead.

• The Mayor's office in Chiôinäu refused permission for a demonstration demanding the erection of a statue in honour of a Romanian writer. Despite the fact that the NGO Hyde Park had been granted permission on appeal, police detained all the demonstrators for 40 hours in poor conditions in Buiucani district police station, without access to a lawyer, before releasing them and charging them with participating in an unsanctioned meeting, resisting the police, and insulting police officers. Audio recordings made on a mobile phone during the arrest did not provide evidence of such resistance. All charges were subsequently dropped.

• On 4 October, the Mayor of Chiôinäu refused permission for AI Moldova to hold a rally against the death penalty in front of the Belarus and US embassies on 10 October. On 15 November the Supreme Court declared the Mayor's actions to be unlawful.

Opposition politicians prosecuted

Some opposition politicians appeared to be targeted for their political views.

• Gheorghe Sträisteanu, a former member of parliament, founder of the first private television company in Moldova and a well-known critic of government attacks on media freedoms, was detained on 21 August and charged with threatening to murder Mihai Mistre÷, the Mayor of ×÷×igäneôti, in connection with a local council decision to cancel the lease on land he was renting. On two occasions cups of chlorine bleach were thrown into his cell, causing him to faint. He was released under house arrest on 28 November. Gheorghe Sträisteanu had previously been detained in 2005 and charged with a series of large-scale thefts from cars.

Abolition of the death penalty

On 29 June the Moldovan parliament voted unanimously to amend Clause 3 of Article 24 of the Constitution, which provided for the death penalty in exceptional cases, thus abolishing the death penalty in law. On 29 July parliament ratified Protocol 13 to the European Convention on Human Rights and the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, aiming at the abolition of the death penalty. Parliament had voted to abolish the death penalty in 1995, with all pending death sentences commuted the following year and provisions for this punishment removed from the criminal code.

Self-proclaimed Dnestr Moldavian Republic

On 17 September the internationally unrecognized Dnestr Moldavian Republic (DMR) voted in favour of continuing the region's de facto independence from Moldova and for eventual union with the Russian Federation. Tudor Petrov-Popa and Andrei Ivan÷oc remained in detention in Tiraspol, despite a July 2004 judgement by the European Court of Human Rights which found their detention to be arbitrary and in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights. They were members of the "Tiraspol Six", sentenced to prison terms in 1993 for "terrorist acts", including the murder of two DMR officials. The four men convicted with them were released in 1994, 2001 and 2004. On

10 May the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe adopted a fourth interim resolution in the case, asking for execution of the judgement of the European Court of Human Rights. The resolution asked Moldova to continue its efforts to secure the release of the two men and requested the Russian Federation to comply with the judgement.

AI country reports/visits

Reports

• Europe and Central Asia: Summary of concerns in the region, January-June 2006 (AI Index: EUR 01/017/2006)

• Commonwealth of Independent States: Positive trend on the abolition of the death penalty but more needs to be done (AI Index: EUR 04/003/2006)