Ridgway Record

What's life like for Russia's political prisoners? Isolation, poor food and arbitrary punishment

- By Dasha Litvinova Associated Press

TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Vladimir KaraMurza could only laugh when officials in Penal Colony No. 6 inexplicab­ly put a small cabinet in his already-cramped concrete cell, next to a fold-up cot, stool, sink and latrine.

That moment of dark humor came because the only things he had to store in it were a toothbrush and a mug, said his wife, Yevgenia, since the opposition activist wasn't allowed any personal belongings in solitary confinemen­t.

Another time, she said, Kara-Murza was told to collect his bedding from across the corridor — except that prisoners must keep their hands behind their backs whenever outside their cells.

"How was he supposed to pick it up? With his teeth?" Yevgenia Kara-Murza told The Associated Press. When he collected the sheets, a guard with a camera appeared and told him he violated the rules, bringing more discipline.

For political prisoners like Kara-Murza, life in Russia's penal colonies is a grim reality of physical and psychologi­cal pressure, sleep deprivatio­n, insufficie­nt food, health care that is poor or simply denied, and a dizzying set of arbitrary rules.

This month brought the stunning news from a remote Arctic penal colony, one of Russia's harshest facilities: the still-unexplaine­d death of Alexei Navalny, the Kremlin's fiercest foe.

"No one in the Russian penitentia­ry system is safe," says Grigory Vaypan, a lawyer with Memorial, a group founded to document repression in the Soviet Union, especially from the Stalinist prison system known as the gulag.

"For political prisoners, the situation is often worse, because the state aims to additional­ly punish them, or additional­ly isolate them from the world, or do everything to break their spirit," Vaypan said. His group counts 680 political prisoners in Russia.

Kara-Murza was convicted of treason last year for denouncing the war in Ukraine. He is serving 25 years, the stiffest sentence for a Kremlin critic in modern Russia, and is among a growing number of dissidents held in increasing­ly severe conditions under President Vladimir Putin's political crackdown.

THE GULAG'S LEGACY

Former inmates, their relatives and human rights advocates paint a bleak picture of a prison system that descended from the USSR's gulag, documented by Alexander Solzhenits­yn in "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" and "The Gulag Archipelag­o."

While undergoing reforms, it "more or less still has the backbone of the Soviet system," says Oleg Kozlovksy, Amnesty Internatio­nal's Russia researcher.

Most often, inmates live in barracks tightly packed with bunk beds. Konstantin Kotov, an activist who spent over a year in Penal Colony No. 2 in the Vladimir region — Navalny's prison from 2021 until June 2022 — recalls cramped quarters of up to 60 men per room.

Not even the pandemic changed that, Kotov told AP. Masks were required from 6 a.m. until 10 p.m., but he doubts they helped much. "Every now and then, people had high fever. They were taken to the infirmary, then brought back, and that was it," he said.

Meals are basic and unsatisfyi­ng.

Breakfast was porridge, lunch was soup with little or no meat, mashed potatoes and a meat or fish cutlet; as was dinner, Kotov said. Inmates got two eggs a week, and fruit and vegetables were a luxury almost always sold out at prison kiosks, he added.

"The ration is not enough, and often it's inedible. So almost no one lives on rations alone," Navalny once said. His wife described his meals as porridge for breakfast, soup and porridge for lunch, and porridge with herring for dinner.

Additional food is sold, or relatives can send parcels, within limits. Those in punishment cells get no packages.

There is a strict regimen of menial tasks and duties, like cleaning and standing at attention.

Andrei Pivovarov, serving four years for running a banned political organizati­on, must clean his solitary cell for several hours a day and listen to a recording of prison regulation­s, says his wife, Tatyana Usmanova. But he can't do both at the same time, or finish quickly and rest, she added. Guards watching via CCTV punish rule-breakers.

A "SYSTEM OF SLAVERY"

There are just under 700 penitentia­ry facilities in Russia, and most are penal colonies of varying security, from minimum to "special regime." There are about 30-40 penal colonies for women.

Political prisoners tend to be sent to those whose administra­tions hold tighter controls, says Zoya Svetova, a journalist and prisoner rights advocate.

Inmates are required to work, but often there are not enough tasks for men. Women usually sew uniforms for the military, police and constructi­on workers, working long hours for meager pay, said prisoner advocate Sasha Graf.

Nadya Tolokonnik­ova, a member of Pussy Riot protest group who was in prison for nearly 22 months in 2012-13, recalls sewing for 16- to 18-hour shifts. "It's a system of slavery, and it is truly horrible," she told AP.

Inmates are supposed to be paid not less than minimum wage -– 19,242 rubles (about $200) a month in 2024 -– but in reality it's as little as 300 rubles (about $3.20) — enough to buy cigarettes and sanitary products at the prison kiosk, Graf said.

INTIMIDATI­ON AND REPRESSION

Tolokonnik­ova said when she arrived at Penal Colony No. 14 in the Mordovia region, the warden described himself as a "Stalinist." She said he told her: "You may be a somebody outside of this colony, have a voice, people who support you and care for you, but here, you are in completely in my power, and you need to understand this."

Although prisons are technicall­y overseen by commission­s that do inspection­s and advocate for inmates, their members in recent years have been replaced by government loyalists, says Svetova, who served on a commission from 2008-16.

She said the current government uses prisons for intimidati­on and oppression.

Reports of physical abuse are common for ordinary inmates but rare for political prisoners, advocates say. Instead, intimidati­on often comes via enforcing minor infraction­s, said Amnesty's Kozlovsky.

Navalny spent months in a punishment cell for not buttoning his uniform properly or not putting his hands behind his back when required. He once described it as a "concrete kennel" of 2½-by-3 meters (8-by10-feet) that, depending on the season, was "cold and damp," or "hot and there's almost no air."

Long stints in punishment cells or other types of solitary confinemen­t are a reality for many, and their only lifeline is a visit from a lawyer or writing letters that are censored and sometimes take weeks to arrive; some colonies use a faster online service.

A TOLL ON PRISONERS' HEALTH

Health care is almost nonexisten­t, current and former inmates and advocates say, with only basic drugs available, if at all.

"Prison guards by default believe the inmate is faking and only complainin­g about health issues to get some kind of extra privileges," said Tolokonnik­ova.

Not surprising­ly, inmates don't fare well in such conditions.

Yevgenia Kara-Murza said her 42-year-old husband's health has worsened in solitary.

He suffered two near-fatal poisonings in 2015 and 2017 and developed polyneurop­athy, a condition that deadens the feeling in his limbs. While he received some treatment in pretrial detention in Moscow, there has been none at the penal colony in Omsk.

"He needs physical therapy, exercise," which is hardly possible in his cell, she said.

Alexei Gorinov, a former member of a Moscow municipal council serving seven years for speaking against the war in Ukraine, suffers from a chronic respirator­y condition and had part of a lung removed before imprisoned. His health deteriorat­ed during six weeks in solitary confinemen­t, and he is still recovering.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States