1. Introduction
2. The motion noted that the situation in the North Caucasus
region of the Russian Federation regarding human rights and the
rule of law continued to raise serious concerns. Reports on serious
human rights violations attributed to law enforcement agents, ongoing
violence and extremism attributed to radical insurgents, and other
arbitrary acts attributed to the local authorities continued. The
motion specifically referred to the continuous persecution of journalists,
civil rights activists, human rights defenders, women, girls, and LGBTI
persons. It noted the constant failure of the Russian Federation
to execute judgments of the European Court of Human Rights, finding
repetitive violations originating from the region, and called on
the Assembly to continue its oversight of the situation and to offer
the Russian Federation all possible assistance to restore human
rights and the rule of law in the North Caucasus.
3. Consequently, the purpose of this report is to examine developments
in the specific situations of particular concern to the Assembly,
as set out in
Resolution
2157 (2017); ascertain whether the Russian Federation has given
effect to the Assembly’s recommendations; and, against that background,
make any further necessary recommendations for the future. To achieve
this objective, extensive research has been undertaken, including
several committee hearings, a fact-finding visit to the region,
and interviews with experts and victims.
4. On 24 April 2018, the committee held a joint hearing with
the Committee on Equality and Non-Discrimination with the participation
of two experts in the framework of this report and the report for
the Assembly’s
Resolution
2230 (2018) “Persecution of LGBTI people in the Chechen Republic
(Russian Federation)”. On 10 September 2018 and on 25 June 2019,
the committee held further hearings with the participation of two
and, respectively, four experts. On 15 November 2019, the committee
authorised me to conduct separate, supplementary interviews with
victims, including ones wishing to remain anonymous. On 28 January
2020, the committee held another hearing with the participation
of three witnesses and one expert, specifically on the topic of
the persecution of LGBTI persons. On 18 January 2022, I held a video
conference with victims of human rights violations, civil society
representatives, journalists from
Novaya
Gazeta and
Caucasian Knot and
members of the following non-governmental organisations: Memorial,
Joint Mobile Group, Russian Justice Initiative, Civic Assistance
Committee, LGBT Network, Human Rights Watch, Conflict Analysis and
Prevention Centre. Some of the journalists, lawyers, and human rights
defenders, including specialists in human bioarchaeology and biological
anthropologists, who attended the hearings either as experts or
victims, preferred to remain anonymous because of fear of persecution.
5. Between 18 and 20 September 2019, I carried out a fact-finding
visit to Moscow and Grozny (the Chechen Republic), where I spoke
with the federal and local authorities and gathered information
on the human rights situation on the spot. Unfortunately, my second
visit to Moscow, Magas (Ingushetia) and Makhachkala (Dagestan) was
postponed twice because of the Covid-19 pandemic and then cancelled
after the expulsion of the Russian Federation from the Council of
Europe.
2. Principal areas of concern in Resolution 2157 (2017) “Human rights in the North Caucasus: what follow-up
to Resolution 1738 (2010)?” and other relevant resolutions
6. In
Resolution 2157 (2017), the Assembly deplored systematic human rights violations
and the climate of impunity prevailing in the region. It condemned
all acts of terrorism while expressing its compassion and solidarity
for the families of all victims of violence in the North Caucasus.
The Assembly noted with regret that specific recommendations addressed
to the Russian authorities in
Resolution
1738 (2010) “Legal remedies for human rights violations in the North
Caucasus Region” had remained unimplemented. The following areas
of the Assembly’s concerns have been underlined.
7. The Assembly noted that the co-operation of the Russian authorities
with civil society, on both federal and regional levels, is crucial
for the peacebuilding process in the region. It also emphasised
the continuous need for effective investigations into serious human
rights violations in the region and the Russian authorities' obligation
to put an end to the sense of impunity.
8. The Assembly called on the Russian Federation to stop the
endemic brutality of the security forces and the systematic use
of unlawful methods by law-enforcement agencies. It noted that “terrorism
can only be fought while respecting fundamental rights and the tenets
of the rule of law” and that violence can only lead to further violence.
9. The Assembly stressed the utmost importance of preventing
enforced disappearances and finding and identifying the remains
of missing persons. It strongly suggested the establishment of a
high-level State committee on missing persons in co-operation with
the International Committee of the Red Cross. It agreed with the
Committee of Ministers about the urgent need for a humanitarian
solution to the problem of missing persons instead of the so-called
investigation model adopted by the Russian authorities. The Committee
of Ministers also stressed the need for a single, high-level body
in charge of solving disappearance cases in the region.
10. The Assembly paid particular attention to the need to protect
vulnerable groups from discrimination and promote tolerance in the
region. It expressed concerns about the deterioration of the situation
of women and girls following rigid interpretation of religious norms
and the recurrence of repressive local traditions. It also condemned
attacks, persecution, and other serious violations against LGBTI
persons. The Assembly deplored “egregious human rights violations
committed against LGBTI people in the Chechen Republic” in its subsequent
Resolution 2230 (2018) “Persecution of LGBTI people in the Chechen Republic
(Russian Federation)” and
Resolution
2417 (2022) “Combating rising hate against LGBTI people in Europe”.
11. Last but not least, the Assembly assessed how the Russian
authorities co-operated with the Council of Europe’s monitoring
mechanisms and how they fulfilled the unconditional obligation to
execute the Court’s judgments. It called on the authorities to request
publication of the reports of the European Committee for the Prevention
of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (“the
CPT”) and to intensify their co-operation with the Council of Europe
Commissioner for Human Rights. The Assembly reiterated its call
to strengthen co-operation with the Committee of Ministers in the
implementation of individual and general measures needed for the
execution of the judgments of the Court concerning the violations
originating from the region.
3. Summary
of developments since the adoption of Resolution 2157 (2017)
12. Almost twelve years have passed
since the Assembly started analysing the situation in the North Caucasus
region, and five years from
Resolution
2157 (2017). Yet, the human rights situation in the region has not
progressed but has become even worse, the argument which I will
support with specific examples below, covering the period from 2017
onwards.
3.1. Safety
of journalists, human rights defenders, defence lawyers, non-governmental organisations,
civil society activists
13. Despite the authorities’ assurances
to the contrary, the environment in which journalists, human rights defenders,
lawyers, non-governmental organisations, and civil society activists
working in the North Caucasus is far from being safe. Threats, retaliation
and hate speech seem normal reactions to expressing opinions and investigative
journalism.
14. Novaya Gazeta regularly
reported about corruption and human rights violations in the North
Caucasus and the Chechen Republic. Its prominent journalist, Elena
Milashina, investigated the 2004 Beslan school siege, the 2006 assassination
of Anna Politkovskaya, the 2008 conflict in South Ossetia, and the
2009 abduction and murder of Natalya Estemirova. Ms Milashina also
reported on the so-called “anti-gay purges” in Chechnya in 2017,
publishing a list of 27 persons allegedly killed by the authorities,
dozens detained, intimidated, and tortured in secret prisons. In
connection with these reports, Novaya
Gazeta published a statement fearing for the safety of
its reporters after Adam Shahidov, an advisor to Chechen President
Ramzan Kadyrov, and several Muslim preachers accused the newspaper
of defamation and threatened retaliation.
15. The Russian authorities have officially warned the newspaper
of closure, and its journalists have been threatened with physical
harm on many occasions. Eventually, the newspaper suspended all
its publishing activities on 28 March 2022 after having received
yet another warning from Russia's federal media regulator, Roskomnadzor,
at this time, in connection with its publications on Russia’s aggression
against Ukraine.
16. In February 2020, Ms Milashina and Marina Dubrovina, a human
rights lawyer, were attacked and beaten by unknown female assailants
in Grozny, in the Chechen Republic.

In April 2020, Mr Kadyrov himself threatened
Ms Milashina with death. In February 2022,
Novaya
Gazeta reported that Ms Milashina had been forced to
leave the Russian Federation due to threats. Her last investigative
reports concerned the retaliation of Mr Kadyrov against the family
of Saidi Yangulbayev, a former Chechen judge.
17. Mr Yangulbayev’s family became a target of the Chechen authorities
after his son, Ibragim Yangulbayev, started reporting on human rights
violations committed in Chechnya in 2015. He complained about being arbitrarily
detained on politically motivated charges in 2017 and tortured by
the Chechen police. His brother, Abubakar Yangulbayev, a human rights
defender, was arrested and released after being questioned as a witness
in December 2021 while reporting on kidnappings of the family’s
relatives, two of them remain in detention. In January 2022, his
elderly mother, Zarema Musayeva, was secretly arrested and held
in inhuman conditions without proper medical assistance.

18. In June 2017, Pyotr Pliev, a correspondent for the Rossiskaya Gazeta in North Ossetia,
was assaulted by an unknown person in Vladikavkaz shortly after
publishing an investigation concerning a local North Ossetian entrepreneur
in which he criticised the head of the local municipality. Two days
before the assault, Mr Pliev announced that he had received threats
connected to this investigation. In July 2020, a man called and
threatened to kill Svetlana Anokhina, the chief editor of the Dagestani
web portal Daptar.ru defending women’s
rights in the Caucasus. Ms Anokhina inferred that the threat may
have been a response to the article published the day before, in
which she criticised the Chechen and federal authorities for the
failure to investigate the death of a Chechen woman allegedly murdered
by her husband.
19. In January 2021, two men attacked the political editor of Osnova.news, Ruslan Totrov, in his
office in Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia, threatened to kill him and
demanded to stop writing “nasty things and lies about their ‘brother’,
South Ossetian President Anatoly Bibilov”. Mr Totrov is a prominent
Ossetian journalist who posts political commentaries and covers
alleged corruption and human rights abuses in South Ossetia. Another Ossetian
journalist, Timur Mazayev and his family received public death threats
from a man identifying himself as Zelimkhan Bitarov, the son of
former North Ossetian ruler Vyacheslav Bitarov. The threat was published
on social media as a reply to the post of Ossetia
News featuring a satirical image of a fight between Mr Bitarov’s son
and the son of a leader of the so-called Liberal Democratic Party
of Russia.
20. In February 2020, Tumso Abdurakhmanov, a YouTube blogger criticising
the Chechen authorities while living in exile, was beaten in his
apartment in Sweden by an unidentified individual of Chechen origin.
The blogger attributed this incident to threats by Magomed Daudov,
the Chairman of the Chechen Parliament, who declared a “blood feud”
against him for criticising Akhmat Kadyrov, ex-President and father
of the current Head of the Chechen Republic.
21. These are only a few examples of attacks on journalists by
private individuals, apparently condoned by the authorities. However,
the authorities themselves abducted and tortured bloggers. The case
of Salman Tepsurkaev, a chat moderator on
1ADAT,
an opposition news channel on Telegram, is illustrative. The Commissioner
for Human Rights of the Council of Europe expressed serious concerns
about reports that Mr Tepsurkayev was abducted by Chechen police
officers early in September 2021 and subsequently detained in police
premises in Grozny, where he was allegedly subjected to sexual violence
and torture.

The European Court of Human
Rights found numerous violations, also in relation to other bloggers
moderating that channel.

22. Bloggers’ relatives were not spared from these waves of persecution.
Within just a few days in December 2021, more than sixty relatives
of prominent opposition bloggers and human rights activists were
reportedly abducted in the Russian Federation and the Chechen Republic.
The list included Tumso Abdurakhmanov, Hasan Khalitov, Mansur Sadulaev,
Minkail Malizayev, Aslan Artsuev, and other bloggers who are believed
to run opposition channels on Telegram and YouTube. Reportedly,
their relatives were also abducted and released only after promising
to persuade the bloggers to cease criticising the authorities.
23. Transborder persecution of the North Caucasians was another
phenomenon brought to my attention during the interviews with the
victims and civil society activists. Several non-governmental organisations complained
about the deportation of Chechen exiles from other European countries
to the Russian Federation. They were then handed over to the authorities
of the Chechen Republic, where they would either be charged unfairly
with crimes or simply disappear. As an example, they cited the deportation
of an outspoken opponent of Mr Kadyrov, Magomed Gadayev, whom the
Chechen courts imprisoned for 11 years on bogus charges for possession
of weapons,

and whom Amnesty International
considered a potential victim of torture and even murder.

According to human rights
defenders, Chechens are no longer safe anywhere in Russian Federation or
abroad as they risk deportation based on bogus criminal charges.
24. Using trumped-up criminal charges as means of persecution
is a common way to silence journalists, human rights defenders and
anyone opposing the authorities. In the Chechen Republic, Zhalaudi
Geriev, a journalist of the Caucasian
Knot, was sentenced in 2016 to three years in prison
allegedly on trumped-up charges of drug possession based only on
his “confession”, which he later said he was coerced into signing. Many
of his fellow journalists declared that the real purpose of the
charges was his activity as an independent journalist reporting
on abuses and corruption across the Caucasus and southern Russia.
He served his sentence in full regardless of wide media and international
community protests calling for his release.
25. In June 2019, the security forces of the Republic of Dagestan
arrested journalist Abdulmumin Gadzhiev, editor of the religious
section of Makhachkala-based newspaper Chernovik, on
criminal charges of participation in a terrorist organisation for
allegedly wiring money to an individual suspected of financing terrorist organisations. Chernovik's staff strongly denied
the charges and claimed that they had been falsified in retaliation
for Mr Gazhiyev's work.
26. The regional authorities in the North Caucasus also turned
against lawyers who defend victims of human rights violations, and
the federal authorities tolerated such actions. In 2017, our colleague
Ms Sabien Lahaye-Battheu (Belgium, ALDE) reported about the violent
attacks against members of the Joint Mobile Group in Chechnya, attempts
to disbar lawyers Marina Dubrovina and Dokka Itslaev, and the threats
against Shamil Magomedov.

I
also reviewed some older cases of persecutions reported by the Council
of Bars and Law Societies of Europe concerning prosecutions, intimidations,
threats and even beatings by police of defence lawyers – the cases
of Mr Rustam Matsev, Ms Sapiyat Magomedova, Mr Musa Suslanov, Mr Magamed Abubakarov
and Mr Vyacheslav Merzakulov. The NGO Lawyers for Lawyers reported
that the Russian Federation left “insufficiently implemented” the
2018 UN Universal Periodic Review recommendations concerning the
effective protection of lawyers, including those on the duty to
investigate all reported attacks and threats against lawyers.

27. Attacking a lawyer defending his or her client appears to
remain an acceptable option for law-enforcement agents in the North
Caucasus. In January 2022, Chechen law enforcement officers physically attacked
lawyers Sergey Babinets, Oleg Khabibrakhmanov and Natalia Dobronravova
while they provided legal assistance for their clients in Nizhny
Novgorod.

28. In general, human rights defenders or social activists are
far from secure in the North Caucasus. For example, in December
2017, Andrei Rudomakha, Viktor Chirikov, Vera Kholodnaya, environmental
activists of the NGO Environmental Watch, were brutally attacked
and beaten after taking photos of what they considered an illegal
construction, allegedly affiliated with high-ranking government
officials in the region of Krasnodar.

Despite video footage of the beating,
the police stalled the investigation stating that they could not
identify the perpetrators.
29. The so-called “Ingush case”, referred to as the largest politically
motivated persecution in the Russian Federation, shook civil society.

In the background of this case lies
the controversial regional border agreement with Chechnya, against
which thousands of participants protested peacefully in Ingushetia
in the fall of 2018. When the protests resumed in the spring of
2019, the authorities decided to suppress them by force, and on
27 March 2018, the RosGvardiya (Russian National Guard) forcibly
dispersed the peaceful rally. As a result, the investigative committee
brought a case of violence threatening life or health of government officials
and extremism against the leaders and participants of the protest
movement.
30. Fifty-two persons have been convicted on charges of resorting
to non-life-threatening force against police and/or incitement to
use such force, whilst the leaders have been accused of extremism
and sentenced to lengthy prison terms.

The international community and human
rights lawyers saw these convictions as politically motivated and
largely groundless, arguing that the federal and district courts
had criminalised a peaceful civic activity. Following this large-scale
prosecution, many local NGOs have closed or were forced to suspend
their activities.
31. Apart from coercion and tolerance of violence, the federal
and North Caucasian authorities use administrative powers to impede
the work of human rights defenders or simply close “inconvenient”
NGOs. For example, the decision to revoke the residence permit of
Vanessa Kogan, the head of the NGO Stichting Justice Initiative,
on the ground of her “posing a threat to the security of the Russian
Federation” forced this prominent human rights group to cease its
activities in the North Caucasus.

32. Another example of closing an organisation on trumped-up grounds
merits special attention. I have been concerned for a long time
about the vicious campaign against Memorial Human Rights Centre
(“HRC Memorial”), a long-standing partner of the Assembly and the
last human rights organisation to have been active in the North
Caucasus. HRC Memorial was indeed the key actor, and a connecting
point for other organisations and lawyers in the region. Its liquidation,
decided in December 2021, based on the much-criticised “foreign agents
law”,

has left civil society and the residents
in the region without any protection.
33. Memorial’s persecution in the North Caucasus has a long history.
In 2007, masked assailants abducted, threatened, and beat Mr Oleg
Orlov, the then chairperson of HRC Memorial, and a television crew accompanying
him to a journalistic investigation about the death of a child during
an anti-terrorist operation in Ingushetia. In 2017, the European
Court of Human Rights found violations of Mr Orlov’s and other applicants’ rights

, but
this did not deter the authorities from continuing to persecuting
him.
34. In January 2018, the authorities orchestrated a series of
attacks against the organisation’s representatives and offices in
Chechnya, Ingushetia, and Dagestan. On 9 January 2018, the police
searched Memorial’s office in Grozny, brought dubious charges of
possession of illegal drugs and then detained incommunicado Mr Oyub
Titiev, then head of HRC Memorial’s office in the Chechen Republic

and laureate of the 2018 Václav Havel
Human Rights Prize.

His lawyers, Mr Aslan Telkhigov and
Mr Petr Zaikin declared that they were placed under secret surveillance,
intimidated, threatened, and forced to resign from defending Mr Titiev
and even had to leave the country. On 17 and 22 January 2018, Memorial’s
office in Ingushetia and a car belonging to Memorial in Dagestan
were set on fire. On 28 March 2018, Mr Sirazhutdin Datsiev, the
head of the organisation’s branch in Dagestan, was attacked by unknown
individuals.
35. As our colleague Mr Egidijus Vareikis (Lithuania, EPP/CD)
stated in his 2018 report “Protecting human rights defenders in
Council of Europe member States”, the number of reprisals against
human rights defenders has recently been on the rise”, including
in the North Caucasus.

Apart
from LGBTI persecution in Chechnya, which I will mention below,
Mr Vareikis predicted “the silencing of Memorial”. Unfortunately,
the Russian authorities went ahead with this, despite wide-spread
protests from the international community and the Court’s interim
measure aimed at preventing the closure of Memorial.

3.2. Criminal
investigations and impunity
36. The criminal justice system
in the North Caucasus proves itself efficient only as a means of
persecution, not as a remedy to ensure accountability for human
rights violations. When journalists and human rights defenders are
victims, the criminal proceedings suddenly become ineffective and
are dragged out for years. According to the most recent decisions
of the Committee of Ministers in its role of supervising the execution
of the Court’s judgments, criminal investigations in most of these
cases have been suspended because of the impossibility to identify
the suspects. In a few cases where the suspects have been identified,
no information has been presented to the Committee of Ministers
since 2016. Many criminal cases were dropped or could be closed
in the future because of the statute of limitations.

37. In
Resolution 1738
(2010) “Legal remedies for human rights violations in the North
Caucasus Region”, the Assembly expressed “its bewilderment and anguish”
that, at the relevant time, not one of the high-profile cases on
“violent deaths or disappearance of personalities” had been elucidated
by the authorities. I reviewed these cases and found that the investigation
was indeed ineffective, with a sense of impunity continuing to prevail
in every one of them.
38. The European Court of Human Rights acknowledged that the investigation
of Anna Politkovskaya’s murder failed to look properly into who
commissioned the crime.

It
also found a failure to properly investigate the assassination of
Natalia Estemirova.

39. Questions remain open about the
modus
operandi in the murder cases of Stanislav Markelov and Anastasia
Baburova, whose deaths, in the opinion of
Novaya
Gazeta, should be attributed to “the Russian security
services or rogue elements within these services” instead of the
convicted killers.

The
fact that these killers had no fair trial

casts
nothing but doubt on the official version of the authorities about
how the crime was perpetrated.
40. The police officer who killed Magomed Yevloyev was found guilty
of causing death by negligence, sentenced to a mere two years in
prison and released conditionally. The killing of Mr Yevloyev was
related to the assassination of Maksharip Aushev, a well-known Ingush
businessperson, as well as to other homicides, attempted murders,
and disappearances of relatives and persons from their inner circle,
with no effective investigation from the authorities.

41. Similarly, the authorities failed to conduct an effective
investigation into the circumstances in which Zarema Gaysanova disappeared
and was presumed dead at the hands of State agents.

Ms Milashina in
Novaya
Gazeta wrote about the disappearance and death of civil
activists Alik Djabrailov and Zarema Sadulayeva, stating that none
of these cases was investigated. Another case, that of Rashid Ozdoyev
and Tamerlan Tsechoyev’s abduction and disappearance has also reached
the European Court of Human Rights,

raising similar
questions.
42. The Court has already found systemic violations of Article
2 of the Convention in respect of both the disappearances of persons
as a result of detention by unidentified members of the security
forces and the failure to conduct an effective investigation.

The Committee of Ministers
continues to supervise the execution of numerous judgments, but
with no tangible success. I have not found one positive example
to illustrate progress in conducting an effective investigation
or ensuring accountability of perpetrators.
3.3. Rising
extremism and risk of terrorism
43. It has been difficult to assess
the situation of fighting terrorism in the North Caucasus due to
media censorship and contradictory opinions, some of them contesting
the credibility of official crime statistics. For example, Russian
academic research showed a trend of intensification of internal
and external terrorist activity in the Northern Caucasus based on
statistics from 2010 to 2015, whilst the Russian official statistics
reported a 26% decrease of terrorist crimes in 2016.

I
could not check the official statistics and did not receive an official
response from the Russian authorities for the reasons described
above.
44. Though reports on alleged terrorist incidents continue to
flow from the North Caucasus, it is difficult to draw reliable conclusions
about the general security situation on the basis of these reports.
This is all the more difficult because the authorities can choose
how to report on these incidents, either as ordinary crimes or security
operations. Media and human rights defenders classify many such
incidents as abuses by the authorities and grave human rights violations,
not linked to preventing terrorism.
45. Novaya Gazeta published
a list of 27 men abducted and extrajudicially executed in the custody
of the authorities in Grozny during one night in January 2017 as
retribution for clashes with police officers in December 2016, alleging
that the number of victims could be as high as 56. In March 2021,
the journal interviewed a former police officer who took part in
these retributions and confirmed the deaths of many persons from
the list. Despite these reports, no proper criminal investigation
followed;

on the contrary,
the local authorities denied everything and turned against the newspaper,
the witness, and his family, declaring that they destabilised the
situation and interfered in the fight against extremism.
46. In 2018, conflicting reports about many other clashes with
security forces continued but without any common denominator between
the authorities and human rights defenders. For example, it was
difficult to attribute reported incidents such as the shooting to
death of a village police chief in Chechnya on 3 January, the killing
of a man suspected of an attack on a police station on 4 January,
shooting to death by unknown radicals of the imam in a closed Salafi
mosque in Dagestan on 6 January, killing by police of a suspected terrorist
in Dagestan on 15 January and of two suspected terrorists in Ingushetia
on 10 February, etc. On 20 August 2018, a series of attacks, some
of them carried out by minors, were directed against police officers in
Grozny and Shali District. And many such examples could follow.
47. The authorities, however, have never analysed the root causes,
tendencies, or developments of extremism in the region. Such an
analysis was mainly carried out by non-governmental organisations
and internationally assisted projects, which speak about the risks
of increasing and transforming Caucasian extremism. For example,
Memorial warned about an increasing number of young people and persons
never suspected of being part of the insurgency becoming tempted
by extremism, which “is no longer a consequence of the previous
conflicts in Chechnya” but a result of oppressive governance.

Their analysis of the statistics confirmed
that among 72 militants killed in 2015-2018, almost 90% were young
people.
48. The unofficial statistics

continued to report clashes and
special operations resulting in deaths among the alleged militants,
civilians, and law enforcement officers. 175 persons reportedly
“fell victim to armed conflicts” in 2017, of whom 134 were killed
and 41 wounded. In comparison with the statistics of 2016, these numbers
decreased in Dagestan but increased in Chechnya. It was also reported
that many killed persons were “militants”. However, civilians, law
enforcement officers and security personnel also lost their lives
in the fight against terrorism. 108 persons were reported as victims
in 2018, with Dagestan leading; 46 and 56 victims were reported
in 2019 and 2020, respectively. In 2021 the numbers reported in
the statistics decreased.
49. The federal and local administrations announced that terrorism
and extremism in the North Caucasus had finally been confined. In
January 2021, the Chechen law enforcement authorities intervened
in force and killed the leader and six members of the so-called
“Aslan Byutukayev’s group”. Ramzan Kadyrov proudly presented it
as a successful law enforcement operation to erase the last pocket
of resistance in the North Caucasus, therefore accomplishing the
task of President Vladimir Putin to put an end to the insurgency
in the region.

50. Yet, experts warned that heavy security crackdowns had done
nothing but stimulated radicalisation in the North Caucasus

and
increased militant activity in the Russian Federation overall.

Indeed,
the general statistics of terrorism crimes in Russia sky-rocketed
in 2020 and 2021, after a brief decrease in 2018 and 2019.

This tendency is explained
by the authorities’ over-criminalisation policies and coercive methods
in the fight against extremism. For example, Memorial reported a
criminal case initiated for membership in an Islamist organisation,
inactive since the 1970s.

I was informed about a hidden database
containing personal data of persons classified as “potential extremists”
used to fabricate criminal cases, whose existence the Dagestani authorities
deny. Recently, the European Court of Human Rights confirmed the
tendency to over-criminalise in the case of two brothers, shepherds
in Dagestan, killed in suspicious circumstances during a spontaneous security
operation.

3.4. Enforced
disappearances and missing persons
51. For 15 years, the Assembly
and the Committee of Ministers have emphasised the urgent need to
resolve the problem of enforced disappearances and search for missing
persons in the North Caucasus. Unofficial statistics on disappearances
continue to grow

while the Russian
authorities continue to deny this data and submit no relevant information.
Without reliable information, it is difficult to evaluate the current
situation, and the lack of official data is in itself capable of
raising serious concerns.
52. It appears that the only way to assess the Russian authorities’
actions would be to refer to the work of the Committee of Ministers
on the supervision of the execution of the Court’s judgments.

During the meetings with
civil society and human rights defenders, I heard that no progress
was made in the search for their relatives, who were victims of
enforced disappearances. These statements were enough to cast doubt
on the Russian authorities’ goodwill to resolve the problem.
53. Neither the local nor the Russian federal authorities implemented
the Assembly’s and the Committee of Ministers’ recommendation to
set up a central co-ordination mechanism dealing with this problem.
Instead, they continued to act as before, namely by using individual
criminal investigations as a means to search for disappeared persons,
which had been already proven ineffective. Furthermore, the Russian
authorities reported no actions whatsoever to prevent further enforced
disappearances.
54. In 2020, the Committee of Ministers noted that the information
provided by the Russian authorities did not dispel its “concerns
in view of the credible reports of continuing disappearances and
unacknowledged detention in the North Caucasus region, particularly
in the Chechen Republic.” It “deplored the lack of sufficient progress
to improve the situation” and invited the authorities to continue
sending information.

According
to the last information submitted by the Russian authorities, the
remains of only two persons had been identified, whilst the last
identification of a missing person had taken place in 2015.
55. In 2021, the Committee of Ministers reiterated the lack of
any significant progress searching for missing persons. It firmly
insisted on “the urgent need to redouble the efforts to find the
missing persons … and to address the deficiencies in the criminal
investigations... as far as possible.” The Russian Federation was
urged to create a humanitarian body to search for missing persons
“using modern scientific knowledge in a procedure complementary
to investigations and taking inspiration from the work and mandates
of bodies responsible for that search of missing persons in other
member States.” The Russian authorities were invited to submit a concrete
time-bound strategy to that effect, as well as to inform the Committee
of Ministers about the investigation of recent complaints about
kidnappings.

56. The Assembly, in its
Resolution
2425 (2022) “Ending enforced disappearances on the territory of
the Council of Europe”, referred to “the slow and incomplete execution
of the numerous judgments of the Court finding procedural violations
of Article 2 on the grounds that there has been no serious investigation
into enforced disappearances in several States, particularly in
the North Caucasus region in the Russian Federation.”
3.5. Violence
and discrimination against women and girls
57. The situation of women and
girls in the North Caucasus has continued to deteriorate. Forced
marriages are still a frequent practice in the region, and a North
Caucasian woman living abroad risks being abducted and forced to
marry back in Dagestan or Chechnya. The
Bopkhoyeva case

was
illustrative of such practices when even the woman’s own family
had not provided her with shelter but returned her and forced her
to live in the abductor’s custody.
58. Unfortunately, many such cases exist in the North Caucasus,
in which the authorities even played an active role. In September
2021, Human Rights Watch stated that women fleeing domestic violence
in the North Caucasus were often captured with the help of law enforcement
authorities and handed back to their families.

The story of a young LGBTI
woman from Chechnya, Khalimat Taramova, describing her attempt to
escape violence and her forced return, illustrates that situation.

59. Moreover, the authorities not only tolerated and contributed
to violence against women, but they also forced the victims to hide
their grief. In 2020, the investigative authorities decided to exhume
a body of a Chechen woman who died in suspicious circumstances involving
domestic violence. A few days later, after Ramzan Kadyrov criticised
the exhumation as contrary to religious traditions and stated that
beatings were something normal during a marriage, the authorities
refused to pursue the criminal investigation, and the victim’s mother
was obliged to apologise for “having listened to rumours”.

60. Even more disturbing reports were brought to my attention
about a case of a nine-year-old girl subjected to female genital
mutilation at a medical clinic in Magas, Ingushetia, in 2019. Her
father took her to a doctor and paid for the crippling surgery,
stating this was necessary “so that she doesn't get turned on”.
However, the authorities charged only the doctor with causing light
bodily harm, punishable by a fine. The victim’s lawyers from Stichting
Justice Initiative requested more severe charges, but pointed out
that Russian law did not even outlaw female genital mutilation or
consider it as a serious crime. In a 2016 report, SJI strongly criticised
the authorities’ tolerance of the widespread practice of female
genital mutilation, mainly in the majority-Muslim areas of the North
Caucasus, where some of the religious leaders supported it, as they
said, to reduce “depravity of all women”.

61. In my interviews with victims and civil rights activists,
I heard many complaints about the extremely difficult socio-economic
situation in which North Caucasian women find themselves, the ongoing
pressure, and the impossibility to flee from abuse. Fleeing to another
region is not an option as it may result in a forceful return or,
in some cases, lead to “honour” killings. Fleeing abroad is almost
impossible because, as I was told, a woman under 30 in Chechnya
cannot even apply for travel documents without a man, her next of
kin, guaranteeing her return.
62. Perhaps the most comprehensive account of women’s and girls’
rights in the North Caucasus is found in the last documents of the
United Nations Committee on Discrimination against Women, which
expressed its deep concern “about the prevalence of harmful practices
against women and girls in the North Caucasus region, including
femicide, killings in the name of so-called honour, child marriage,
forced marriage, abduction of women and girls for forced marriage
and female gentile mutilation”. It noted with concern “the lack
of effective implementation of federal legislation on the investigation,
prosecution and punishment of such crimes against women in the region.”
The UN Committee also noted with concern “[r]eports of polygamy
and the lack of legal and economic protection of women in polygamous
unions, and the application of discriminatory religious and customary
laws on divorce and inheritance and the denial of child custody
to women, particularly in the North Caucasus region”, including
“[r]eports of bride kidnapping, leading to child marriage or forced
marriage”.

3.6. Discrimination
against LGTBI persons
63. The situation of LGBTI persons
in the region remains critical. Despite wide-spread condemnation
by the international community and calls on the Russian Federation
to investigate or allow an international investigation of the crimes
against LGBTI persons in Chechnya, the authorities continue to deny
the problem. The Assembly deplored the so-called “anti-gay purges”
in Chechnya in February and March 2017, which resulted in many forced
disappearances, secret abductions, incommunicado detentions, imprisonments, torture,
and extrajudicial killings of persons based on their perceived sexual
orientation.

I am afraid that these “purges”
have never ended.
64. In January 2019, during the new wave of attacks on the LGBTI
community in Chechnya, two persons were reportedly tortured to death
and around 40 were detained by the authorities. Our colleague Piet
De Bruyn (NR, Belgium), General Rapporteur on the rights of LGBTI
people, and I condemned these attacks.

Later, during my visit to the Russian
Federation in September 2019, I was discouraged by the federal authorities
from speaking about the LGBTI persecution in Chechnya, and the local
authorities in Chechnya yet again claimed that such a community
did not exist there. During the same visit, I heard a disturbing
statement from the federal Ombudsperson Tatyana Moskalkova, who
claimed that the situation in Chechnya was no worse than anywhere else
in the Russian Federation.
65. During committee hearings of 28 January 2020, an LGBTI person
testified about his unlawful detention and torture in March 2017
and his family being persecuted by the authorities in order to make
them, literally, “get rid of their gay relative”. He had to flee
the country because LGBTI persons are not safe anywhere in Russian
Federation as they can be forcefully returned to their families
or even prosecuted under fake criminal charges. In February 2021,
as Human Rights Watch reported, two gay men were forcibly returned
to Chechnya on charges of aiding and abetting an illegal armed group.

Furthermore, apart
from State-sponsored large-scale persecution, the Chechen authorities
refuse to investigate complaints of abduction and ill-treatment based
on sexual orientation.

3.7. Implementation
of the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
66. Human rights breaches reported
in the region eventually reach the Court and then the Committee
of Ministers, in its role of supervising the implementation of the
Court’s judgments. Both have already recognised that most such violations
carry a systemic character. During 15 years of continuous supervision,
the list of cases and violations continued to grow, seemingly without
any prospects of execution.
67. The Committee of Ministers currently supervises the execution
of 315 cases

in the
Khashiyev and Akhayeva group under
the “enhanced procedure”, which is applied for particularly significant
cases or groups of cases. These cases include violations with the
regard to persons disappeared between 1999 and 2006, with outstanding
issues relating to lack of investigation, compensation, and impunity;

the
military attack on the village of Katyr-Yurt in February 2000;

and abductions
by law enforcement officers and subsequent disappearance of the
applicants’ relatives after 2006, with a continuing lack of effective
investigations.

68. The execution of these cases has always been a burdensome
process, mainly due to the lack of cooperation from the Russian
authorities. In
Resolution
2157 (2017), the Assembly reiterated its concerns about the lack
of progress in the implementation of the judgments of this group
and focused on specific recommendations of the Committee of Ministers,
including its recommendations from
Resolution 1738 (2010). The Assembly’s recommendations were ignored by the
Russian authorities, and, as observed from the described above developments,
the violations grew in numbers and became more severe.
69. In 2020, the Committee rapporteur on the implementation of
judgments of the European Court of Human Rights, Mr Constantinos
Efstathiou (Cyprus, SOC) concluded that the Russian Federation implements
the Court’s judgments ineffectively, being unable to provide effective
remedies and unwilling to remedy the lack of investigation into
cases of ill-treatment and torture, as well as other serious human
rights violations. He also noted that “the important period during
which the Russian Federation distanced itself from the Assembly (between
January 2016 and June 2019) was lost from the perspective of implementation
of the Court’s judgments”, which is also the period for the assessment
in the present report. The rapporteur concluded that “it [became]
more difficult to recover the time lost, bearing in mind the structural
problems [that the Russian Federation faces]”, one of which is “various
violations of the Convention relating to the actions of the security forces
in the Chechen Republic” all connected to the
Khashiyev
and Akhayeva group of cases.

70. The last 2021 Decision

of
the Committee of Ministers concerning this group of cases stated
again that the Russian authorities were either unco-operative or
failed to submit information. The language of this decision is self-explanatory
as it reiterated the same recommendations mentioned in Assembly
Resolution 2157 (2017).
71. It is worth mentioning that the
Khashiyev
and Akhayeva group of cases is not the only one that
includes judgments finding violations originating from the region.
For example, the group of
Dobriyeva and
others 
about the inefficiency
of investigations into killings and disappearances in Ingushetia
has been pending execution since 2014 without progress. The case
of
Nagmetov concerning the
death resulting from the use of a tear grenade by Dagestani police
at a peaceful demonstration also awaits an action plan or information
from the authorities since 2017.

Other
groups of cases of violations of freedom of expression and assembly involving
the persecution of human rights defenders and journalists, for example,
the
Novaya Gazeta case,

are
also still awaiting implementation, many of them for many years.
3.8. Co-operation
of the Russian authorities with the Council of Europe monitoring
bodies and mechanisms to improve the situation in the North Caucasus
72. The Russian authorities have
remained unco-operative in all matters concerning the North Caucasus. The
refusal to co-operate with the CPT is an illustrative example.
73. A quick look at the CPT statistics reveals the lack of co-operation
of the Russian authorities and, sometimes, even an implied refusal
to co-operate. The CPT visited the North Caucasus, in particular
the Chechen Republic, 12 times, issuing four “Public Statements”,
the last one in March 2019.

The Russian Federation
is one of the persistent objectors to publishing the CPT visit reports;
it authorised publication of 4 out of 28 reports (none concerning
the North Caucasus). 40% of the CPT time spent visiting the Russian Federation
was dedicated to the North Caucasus.
74. The last CPT public statement, the fourth in a row, reads
that “notwithstanding the efforts [the CPT] has made over the last
20 years, torture of detained persons in the Chechen Republic has
remained a deep-rooted problem”. The CPT continued to reiterate
that the widespread practice of police ill-treatment, including
torture, is not unique to the Chechen Republic, but it is seen in
other republics of the North Caucasian region. “This speaks not
only to a dereliction of duty at the level of the Republic’s authorities
but also to a failure of effective oversight and control at the
federal level”, the CPT concluded.
75. Following this statement, I stressed that the CPT only makes
public statements in certain exceptional circumstances – only nine
in its 30-year history, and as stated, four concern the North Caucasus.
The CPT found that the Russian Federation failed to co-operate and
refused to improve the situation, contrary to its treaty obligations.

This view was supported
during a joint meeting of our committee, the Monitoring Committee,
and the President of the CPT.

Yet, the authorities in Chechnya
treated the CPT’s statements as unfounded and unsubstantiated.

4. Whether
the Russian Federation has given effect to the Assembly’s recommendations
76. I consider the human rights
violations described above as only the tip of the iceberg. Violations
have been approved, tolerated, or even incited by politicians and
public officials in the North Caucasus and in Moscow. Their public
speeches, social network posts or official statements in reaction
to the human rights defenders’ outcry have never changed. It seems
that human rights are a mere nuisance to those politicians and officials,
not matters of concern to them.
77. Neither the federal nor the local republican authorities have
properly considered the Assembly’s recommendations. Contrary to
the Assembly’s recommendations Magomed Daudov, the Chairman of the Chechen
Parliament, called in late December 2017 for the persecution of
human rights defenders, blaming them for international sanctions
against Chechen politicians, while Ramzan Kadyrov described human
rights defenders as “enemies of the people” to be banned from the
Chechen Republic and called for reprisals against them. This attitude
continued to grow and spread throughout the Northern Caucasus region.
78. Most strikingly, the federal authorities have chosen to ignore
or refrain from interfering, as they call it, in the “internal affairs”
of the Caucasian Republics.
79. For example, in January 2022, Ramzan Kadyrov commented on
the calls to release the abducted mother of prominent human rights
defender Abukadar Yangulbayev. He stated that the whole family should
be either jailed or buried in the ground.

Adam Delimkhanov, a Chechen parliamentarian
in the Russian State Duma, posted a video recording him threatening
every member of Mr Yangulbayev’s family with execution by “ripping off
their heads”. Such violent hate speech was completely ignored by
the federal and local authorities. Sergei Peskov, the press secretary
of President Putin, implied that the Kremlin declined to get involved,
calling the threats a “personal opinion” and preferring, as he said,”not
to believe such reports [about the abduction] without confirmation”.

80. The Assembly had warned against extreme violence spreading
from the Chechen Republic to other parts of the North Caucasus region
and beyond.

Now, it appears that not only extremism
has continued to flourish and spread to neighbouring republics of
the Northern Caucasus, but also the climate of violence and tolerance
for abuses committed by the authorities has spread to the Russian
Federation as a whole, and beyond. The role played by Ramzan Kadyrov
and his Chechen fighters in the brutal siege of Mariupol clearly requires
further investigation, but I fear that it is symptomatic for the
general trend of brutalisation originating in the North Caucasus
region.
5. Next
steps and possible recommendations
81. The Russian Federation was
expelled from the Council of Europe on 16 March 2022.

This
has brought any effective co-operation with the Russian authorities
to an end. The Committee of Ministers announced that it would continue
to support and co-operate with civil society, and it would not stop
supervising the implementation by the Russian Federation of the
Court’s judgments. The Court decided that the Russian Federation
would remain bound by the Convention until 16 September 2022 and
that in would continue to deal with all applications alleging violations
of the Convention occurring up until this date.
82. Irrespective of its membership in the Council of Europe, Russian
Federation remains bound by its international obligations, including
those under the United Nations human rights instruments, of which
the Russian Federation remains a Party.
83. I hope that the Russian Federation will one day abide by these
obligations and implement in good faith the judgments of the European
Court of Human Rights, including those yet to come. As recommended
by the Assembly many times, the Russian authorities should develop
a constructive attitude in relation to civil society, human rights
defenders, victims of human rights abuses, LGBTI persons, and others.
84. The Russian Federation is expected to co-operate constructively
with the CPT, while it remains a Party to the European Convention
for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treading
or Punishment (ETS No. 126).

85. As shown by numerous examples in this report, human rights
activists, lawyers, journalists, LGBTI persons, and women and girls
fleeing domestic violence are frequently victims of killings, abductions,
beatings, threats against family members, and trumped-up criminal
charges. We have also seen that persecuted persons from the North
Caucasus region are not safe in other regions of Russian Federation,
and in some cases even abroad. For these reasons, I suggest that
we recommend to all member and observer States of the Council of Europe
to examine asylum applications emanating from persons from the North
Caucasus, especially those belonging to the above-mentioned vulnerable
groups, with particular care. Member States should also take into account
the fact that refugees from this region do not have a viable internal
flight alternative. Once they are granted asylum in one of our member
or observer States, such persons should also be given adequate protection.

86. Finally, given the frequent abuses of the Interpol Red Notice
system already pointed out in two earlier reports of the Assembly,

I
believe that the Assembly should also call on Interpol to be particularly
careful when checking requests for Red Notices against persons from
the North Caucasus region.
6. Conclusions
87. The situation with regard to
human rights and the rule of law in the North Caucasus has not improved since
the Assembly’s last
Resolution
2157 (2017) and the authorities of the Russian Federation have not implemented
any of the Assembly’s recommendations. Civil society is being persecuted
to the point that it has practically ceased to function in the region;
LGBTI persons, women and girls, are subjected to extreme violence and
fear; the sense of impunity persists and extremism grows. Those
fleeing from persecution in the North Caucasus region are not safe
anywhere else in the Russian Federation and even abroad, as Chechen
security services have extended their reach beyond the borders of
the Russian Federation.
88. Even with the Russian Federation no longer being a member
of the Council of Europe, the Assembly should continue to observe
the situation in the North Caucasus. The Russian authorities should
be reminded at every opportunity of their continuing international
responsibilities with regard to human rights, including those flowing
from relevant UN instruments such as the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights and other international conventions
to which the Russian Federation remains a State Party.