Fsin.su
Inmates praying at a religious service in
Bashkortostan's Penal Colony No. 4.
Up to 900 prisoners are
refusing food, and five slashed their forearms in a high-security prison in
Bashkortostan after an inmate was beaten to death, rights activists said.
The
inmates took the step to draw attention to prison authorities’ refusal to grant
medical assistance to Sergei Lasko, who died after a severe beating by prison
employees on the night of July 17, activists from the Public Monitoring
Committee, an organization that defends prisoners’ rights, told the Gulagu.ru
human rights portal.
Activists said 900 of the roughly 1,100 inmates at
Bashkortostan’s Prison Colony No. 4 were refusing food, while the Federal Prison
Service gave a figure of 118, stressing that the inmates were only refusing food
prepared on the prison’s premises.
Almira Zhukova, a member of the local
branch of the Public Monitoring Committee, said activists learned about Lasko’s
death and the ensuing hunger strike only by chance after a lawyer visited the
prison on a separate issue.
“Then we discovered the beatings; we found
proof,” Zhukova told Gulagu.ru. “It was terrifying. They beat [prisoners] till
they were blue. All the rooms were covered in blood.”
An inmate told Zhukova
that while Lasko was being beaten, guards played loud music over prison speakers
to mask the victim’s shouts. “Whenever the music starts, we know that they are
going to beat someone,” the unidentified inmate was quoted as
saying.
Activists now fear that prison authorities could refuse to give up
Lasko’s body for burial in order to hide the cause of his death.
Both Zhukova
and Gulagu.ru head Vladimir Osechkin have written to the Investigative Committee
and Federal Security Service with requests to open criminal cases into the
death.
On Saturday, the Bashkortostan arm of the Federal Prison Service
denied Zhukova’s comments in a statement on its website and justified prison
employees’ use of force against Lasko by the severity of his conviction.
“Prison Colony No. 4 houses criminals who have committed especially grave
crimes. They are repeat offenders,” the statement said, adding that the inmates
on strike had behaved extremely badly over the course of their
incarceration.