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Tymoshenko Team, Prison Officials Spar Over Bright Lights

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Thursday, 5 January 2012


What kind of conditions is Yulia Tymoshenko facing in jail? It all depends on whom you ask.

Prison officials say the former Ukrainian prime minister is enjoying European-standard comforts at the Kachanivska Penal

Colony No. 54 in Kharkiv, where she was transferred one day before New Year's Eve to serve a seven-year sentence for

abuse of office.

A press release issued by Ukraine's State Penitentiary System says Tymoshenko's prison cell "meets all European

requirements and standards of detention," and comes equipped with everything from a microwave oven to a washing machine

and even a bidet.

Accompanying photographs show a spacious, well-lit room that looks more like a comfortable middle-class apartment than a

jail cell.

But Tymoshenko's defenders say conditions in the Kharkiv cell are nothing short of torture. Lawyer Serhiy Vlasenko,

speaking January 3 outside Kachanivska, said the 51-year-old former prime minister is suffering sleep deprivation and

profound stress in a cell that is kept brightly lit and under 24-hour surveillance.

"This will be the subject of an appeal to the Council of Europe's Committee for the Prevention of Torture," Vlasenko

said. "[There is] 24/7 camera surveillance and light in the face and the impossibility of sleeping properly and the

absence of medical help. All this has one aim only: to psychologically and physically break Yulia Volodymyrivna

[Tymoshenko]."

A Clean But Well-Lighted Cell

There have so far been no outside witnesses to support either side's account of Tymoshenko's treatment. But if true,

Vlasenko's claims of round-the-clock, relentlessly bright lights and insufficient medical help appear to contravene

European standards regarding prisoner treatment.

Prison officials do not deny that Tymoshenko's cell, which she shares with a fellow prisoner, remains lit on a 24-hour

basis. Ivan Pervushkyn, the head of the Kachanivska colony, told RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service that cells are routinely

kept well lit in order to facilitate surveillance. Prison officials say Ukrainian law stipulates that all prison cells

are equipped with video cameras and "sleep-mode" lighting in order to ensure the continuous supervision of inmates. But

they haven't addressed whether the light in Tymoshenko's cell is adjusted to "sleep mode" at night.

​​The European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) -- whose guidelines on prison conduct set the standard for

the Council of Europe's 47 member states, including Ukraine -- stipulates that inmates should have access to the proper

air quality, heating, and lighting needed to sleep comfortably.

Several Council of Europe states have come under CPT censure for using round-the-clock lighting in prison cells. Some

states defend the practice in instances of surveillance when the inmate is considered a suicide risk.

Prison officials in Ukraine say Tymoshenko is subject to surveillance because she remains under investigation for

additional criminal charges.

Her lawyers protested the release of a video in late December that showed Tymoshenko lying in bed in jail in Kyiv.

Health Concerns

European guidelines also aim to protect the right of inmates to adequate medical care. Fifty-one-year-old Tymoshenko,

who has complained of a range of health concerns since she was first detained in Kyiv in August, says she has been

denied the right to independent medical care. Penitentiary officials in Kharkiv say the former prime minister has turned

down an opportunity to be examined by prison doctors.

The CPT, which last paid a routine visit to Ukraine in 2009, has urged the country to adopt new medical standards that

would permit the Health Ministry, rather than the Justice Ministry, to provide medical professionals working in the

country's prison system.

Such an arrangement, says the CPT, would better ensure the well-being and privacy of inmates.

In addition to its routine visits, the CPT has carried out occasional ad-hoc trips to Ukraine. The most recent, which

lasted from November 29 to December 6, was aimed at investigating conditions in pretrial detention centers, in Kyiv and

Kharkiv.

The visit came during the time that Tymoshenko was being held in the Lukyaniv detention center. The CPT has not

commented, however, on whether it met with Tymoshenko during the course of its visit.

The CPT does not release its recommendations, which are nonbinding, to the public.

Article by Daisy Sindelar - RFE/RL

Thursday, 5 January 2012

RFERL
   Europe

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