Analytical review of the trial of Dzmitry Miadzvedz: the last day
The trial of entrepreneur Dzmitry Miadzvedz continues in the Maskouski
District Court of Minsk, with participation of Judge Alena Rudnitskaya, lawyer
Siarhei Lepesh and representative of the state accusation Mr. Mazovka.
Miadzvedz is accused of armed resistance and violent
actions against several police officers. He allegedly tried to break through
the police cordon and kicked them with his feet, used iron bars and bottles.
10.10
a.m. The six police victims sit in the front row.
The trial began.
10.15. The court decides
the question of recognizing the policemen as victims. After they are declared
victims, prosecutor Mazouka takes floor. Judge Rudnitskaya questions Dzmitry
Miadzvedz.
10.25. Miadzvedz’s testimony:
At 10 p.m. I met with an
acquaintance at the railway station, on business. My son played with his
friends in the Serabranka suburb. I planned
to meet with him near the stop in the Nezalezhnastsi
Square and go home.
We met. I saw many people on the square. My son wanted to see what was going on
and find his friends in the crowd. I insisted on going home, but then agreed to
come towards the monument to Lenin and take his friends with us.
I noticed that the glass on the entrance doors was
broken, but there were no people near it. Then there appeared policemen with
baffles and a fight started. A guy fell down, I tried to help him stand up. At
this time the crowd went straight for me.
I felt blows. I covered myself with hands, but still got some in the head. I
couldn’t get out of there, as there were too many people. I fell.
1030. The prosecutor asks: ‘How did you defend yourself?’
Miadzvedz explains: ‘I covered myself with my hands, I was hit with truncheons
from all sides. Someone helped me to get out. I met my son
and tried to get away. However, all ways were blocked. My son and I returned to
the monument to Lenin, where we were detained and put into a paddy wagon.
Prosecutor: Did you take active steps?
Miadzvedz: No, I just covered myself with hands from the
blows.
Prosecutor: What were other people doing?
Miadzvedz: I didn’t see as I tried to protect myself from
the blows. Not seen since closed by strikes.
Prosecutor: Did you resist
during the arrest?
Miadzvedz: We quietly went into the paddy wagon.
The defendant’s lawyer starts asking questions to him.
10.36. Interrogation of the victims starts. The first of them, Aliaksei Sakach, born in 1983, a riot policeman. He sais he is not acquainted
with the defendant. ‘We lined up in front of the Government House at 10.30
p.m. We heard the rebels breaking the glass of the entrance doors. After a
while the people rushed at us, hitting on the baffles. We saw a crowd of aggressive
men (they shouted). We cut them off from the porch of the Government House, the
crowd was in front of us.’, says the policeman.
He adds that he didn’t see anything – the helmet went misted, blows rained down on him, but he cannot say with what and how he
was hit. He didn’t remember any of those who delivered the blows.
The questioning of the next victim, Andrei Palavinkin, born in 1983, begins. He
says that on 19 December he worked on the Square,
dressed in civvies. Being asked what was happening on the square, he said that
“People were shouting slogans”, but cannot remember any of them. He says
that he stood there with a walkie-talkie. While in the crowd, he was struck
from behind. He turned around and saw a man running away.
11.00. Victim Palavinkin is questioned by the lawyer.
11.05 The next victim is
riot policeman Dzmitry Liavitski.
Victim Liavitski doesn’t see any contradictions between his current and past
testimony. In his oral testimony he said that he had received the same injuries
occasionally – somebody had allegedly fallen and got under his baffle. All
happened by an accident. The people tried to leave the “corridor”. It was the
moment when people were put into paddy wagons.
11.25. The next victim, Siarhei Masalski, says that he
dissected the crowd into two parts. He saw that the chain of the riot police
was broken and liquid was spilled over some policemen from fire extinguishers.
Then demonstrators started tearing truncheons out from the policemen and
hitting them. “I was hit in the temple”, he says. He also says that his
testimony during the investigation is more accurate and he really saw some
fire.
11.35. Another police officer, Vital Polipeika, is
questioned. He argues that two people hindered his movement, someone pulled him
out of the police chain, but his friends brought him back into the line. He saw
that a man on the right was holding a spade stem in his hands. People were
hitting in the shield and on the legs, and then someone poured him from a fire
extinguisher. He also confirms that reinforcement rods were thrown at the
police by someone in the crowd.
11.40. The last victim, Yahor Karavai, is questioned. He
heard how slogans and insults against police were cried out. ‘I was hit in the
head one time and wasn’t beaten after it,’ he says. ‘I went to doctors, as I had
a hematoma’.
11.50. All victims (riot policemen Aliaksei Sakach, Andrei
Palavinkin, Dzmitry Liavitski, Siarhei Masalski, Vital Pilipeika and Yahor
Karavai) were questioned and left the court hall. Three new victims are
invited.
11-58. Aliaksei Kashtalan, Deputy Chair of the special mission police regiment,
is questioned. He tells that the people were aggressive and smashed the glass
at the entrance doors of the Government House. He saw how policemen were poured
from fire extinguishes and hit with spade stems and fishing rods. Being asked
by the lawyer whether he had seen the defendant there, he said that he hadn’t.
12.05. Ruslan Volkau is questioned. He explains
that he heard the crash when the glass was smashed. He got a hit in the leg,
but didn’t remember anyone.
12.10. Another victim is Yury Dzemidovich. He saw the crowd with flags and
heard the beating of the glass. ‘Sticks and a litter bin were thrown at us. We
were kicked in the legs. I had a feeling that the people want to make a
slaughter. Somebody smashed my lips by tearing away the face guard from the
helmet. I didn’t see any incendiary devices. We were dazzled with flash-light.’
12.25. The questioning of the civil plaintiff Dzmitry
Lepesh, representative of the Presidential Administration, begins. He reports
that the damage caused to the property has been fully repaid and refuses from
the claim. The judge announces a break and goes into her room.
1.10 p.m. The break is over. Another victim, lieutenant
colonel Ihar Bazhok, is questioned. He confirms that he got hit from behind. He didn’t see any things in people’s hands. As this
testimony contradicts the previous one, the judge reads the protocol of his
testimony during the preliminary interrogation, where he stated that
demonstrators swore, threw bottles and fought with sticks. He didn’t see
Miadzvedz on the square.
1.26. A break is announced till 2 p.m.
2.10. After the break, the trial resumed. Five more
victims are questioned. The first of them is Dzianis Bulavatski. He says that
demonstrators threw plastic bottles and sticks at them. All of them were
aggressive. ‘We started pushing the crowd away, encircled them and started loading
them into vehicles. I was hit with a fist and asked for help. I didn’t see who
hit me. I didn’t see Miadzvedz’.
2.20. Another victim, Dzmitry Skarahod, bears testimony. He
says that the crowd wanted to break through the cordon and kicked them. Somebody
forcedly removed the helmet from his head and hit him in the head several
times. The crowd threw snowballs and litter. He didn’t see Miadzvedz either.
The next victim is Aliaksandr Kudravets. He asked to read out his previous testimony because he didn’t remember
anything. The prosecutor asked him to recall. Kudravets said that he had
been hit with a metal bar and he received a hematoma. He didn’t see the
defendant.
2.30. The next victim, Yury Ziankevich, explains that sticks
and ice were thrown at them. ‘I was attacked with a metal bar and a spade stem,
and then was poured from a fire extinguisher. I went
blind and applied to an ambulance. I didn’t see the accused Miadzvedz.’
The next victim, Komar, didn’t saw Miadzvedz either. But another one, Aleh
Dudarchyk, says that the defendant was an active participant of the rally. During the detention, he shouted anti-state slogans. He
didn’t see that Miadzvedz resisted to the police, but remembers how he was dressed.
The defendant asks him about it and states that, contrary to Dudarchyk’s
statement, he wasn’t dressed in a black sweater, and didn’t wear a beard
either. He says that he was wearing a cap with an ornament, and a light brown
coat.
2.50. Victim Aliaksandr Hrysenka is questioned.
He explains that the defendant shouted the slogan “Long Live Belarus!’ against
the police.
3.10. The court starts studying the written materials of the case. The judge
enumerates the items which were found on the square, and the traumas that were
received by policemen.
The prosecutor asks the defendant: “You took some photos
with your mobile phone during the rally. In what circumstances did you do it?”
The characteristics of Miadzvedz
and the list of the social objects constructed by his company are attached to
the case.
3.33. The viewing of the video shots
made during the rally begins. Miadzven can be seen covering his hands from
policemen’s blows. He answers to the prosecutor that it was impossible to leave
the square, because the people were standing to close to one another.
3.50.
State accuser Mazouka
takes floor. He states that the guilt of the defendant is completely proved by
testimonies of the victims and asks to sentence him to 4 years in prison.
4.01. Lawyer Siarhei Lepesh states that no evidence of Miadzvedz’s guilt was
drawn at the trial. He argues that there were no arms, as spade stems and
spades aren’t arms. “There was no mass riot”, he says. He also draws many discrepancies in the case
materials in the preamble of the accusation.
4.22. Dzmitry Miadzvedz makes his last
plea. “When I got in this situation, I had no aggression. I tried to defend
myself from the blows. I got two blows. It can be seen on the video that I didn’t
deliver any blows.
In fact, I am a peaceful man. I have great plans for the development of my
business, the use of new technologies for building social houses. All this is
terrible.”
4.30. The judge went into her room to prepare the verdict.
7.50 p.m. Dzmitry
Miadzvedz was sentenced to 3 years of personal restraint without direction to an
open penitentiary institution.
Conclusions:
Analyzing the trial of Miadzvedz we should point that the trial of Miadzvedz
and the trial of Breus and Gaponov different from the previous trials, (of
Parfiankou, Novik, Malchanau and Atroshchankau), as this time the procuracy
presented new charges to defendants, trying to refine the notion of the mass
riot. In addition, new victims were introduced in the case on motion of the
state accuser Mazouka. As a result, 15 injured policemen of the special mission
police regiment of the Main Police Department of the Minsk City Executive
Committee were interrogated as victims during the court proceedings. According to
the results of forensic expertise which were attached to the case, they had
received inconsiderable injuries. It should be noted that that the victims
appeared in the case as a result of questionings and forensic expertise only on
18 February 2011, almost two months after the events of 19 December 2010, after
the case materials had been passed to court. It should be viewed as
reinforcement of the accusation by the procuracy and an attempt to present it
as organization of the mass riot in Minsk
on 19 December 2010.
The confession of people as victims by court gives them the opportunity to
lodge claims for compensation of the health damage and moral damage by the
people who were found guilty of participation in the mass riot. Thus, the
authorities can use such mechanism of material punishment towards participants
of the action of 19 December 2010.
Analyzing the court proceedings, we must make the following
conclusions:
1. It wasn’t proved that a mass riot took place on 19 December 2010 in Minsk. Thus, the state accuser didn’t manage
to prove that participants of the actions used personal violence, pogroms,
arsons, demolished property and showed armed resistance. The items that had
been allegedly found on the square aren’t considered as arms by the Law of the Republic of Belarus On Arms. There were no arsons and demolition of property, because according
to the results of the expertise of the damage inflicted to the Government House
(presented to court by the Main Economic Council of the Presidential
Administration) the damage didn’t result in demolition of property, because the
entrance doors needed to be repaired, not replaced.
2. A very important reason to punish a person for participation in mass rioting
is the personal involvement in the actions which are qualified as mass riot. As
confirmed by victims and witnesses during the trial, it wasn’t Mr. Miadzvedz
who inflicted damage to the health of the victims. None of the witnesses
managed to provide a detailed account of Miadzvedz’s actions on the square. As
it can be seen from the video materials viewed at the trial, Mr. Miadzvedz
really stood in front of the police cordon, but his actions were absolutely
non-violent – he just covered his hand from the truncheon blows delivered by the
police. That’s why, there wasn’t presented any evidence that Miadzvedz
committed a crime.
3. There is no doubt that the only legal decision of the court with such
evidence could be acquittal of Mr. Miadzvedz.
The court, using Article70 of the Criminal Code, which gives
the right to use a punishment even milder than the lowest sanction provided by
the accusative article, found Miadzvedz guilty of participation in the mass
riot and sentenced him to three years of personal restraint without direction
to an open penitentiary institution. Thus, Miadzvedz was released from guard at
the court hall. This witnesses the political motivation of the verdict, because
at earlier trials on the criminal case defendants were sentenced to imprisonment,
though there was no evidence of their guilt either. It can be connected to the fact
that the criminal case of two citizens of the Russian Federation, Breus and
Gaponov, who were also charged with participation in the mass riot, was
considered at the Maskouski District Court at this very time. Due to the
pressure from the side of the Russian
Federation, the judge issued a maximally
mild verdict. In such circumstances, it was impossible to punish Mr. Miadzvedz
with imprisonment.