05 December 2006, 23:30

Council of Europe is concerned with a death of Georgian woman in Moscow

The Council of Europe is seriously concerned with the death of a Georgian woman, whom Russian authorities were about to deport from Moscow to Tbilisi.

The Council of Europe's statement runs that they would keep close trace on investigation of what has happened, the Liberty Radio reports.

Russian human rights activists are going to hold their own investigation.

Manana Jabelia died on December 2 from heart attack in the Moscow special custody centre for foreigners. The refugee from Abkhazia was detained early in October, when her passport was at the exchange procedure in the Georgian Embassy. The court sentenced her to deportation. Ms. Manana started hunger strike, then a new consideration was appointed. The Moscow City Court ruled to release her. However, the ruling had arrived to the custody centre with a delay caused by multitude of intermediary instances.

Manana Jabelia felt bad in the cell, she suffered from frequent hypertension attacks, and the ambulance was called up to her, the Russian "Novaya Gazeta" reports.

We remind you that the most of Georgian citizens in Russia are refugees from Abkhazia. During the 1991-1992 war, the people who were forced to leave their homes had moved here together with their families. "It should be stated that Russia has failed so far to provide the Abkhazian refugees with any legal status. This happens at the background of the fact that today 80% of the population in the non-recognized Abkhazia are citizens of Russia. But nobody cares of them here," Svetlana Gannushkina, member of the Board of the Human Right Centre "Memorial," stated earlier.

All news
НАСТОЯЩИЙ МАТЕРИАЛ (ИНФОРМАЦИЯ) ПРОИЗВЕДЕН И РАСПРОСТРАНЕН ИНОСТРАННЫМ АГЕНТОМ ООО “МЕМО”, ЛИБО КАСАЕТСЯ ДЕЯТЕЛЬНОСТИ ИНОСТРАННОГО АГЕНТА ООО “МЕМО”.

September 22, 2024 23:31

September 22, 2024 21:39

September 22, 2024 21:12

September 22, 2024 17:30

  • Analysts comment on Govt's decision to reject "hijab law"

    The political analysts interviewed by the "Caucasian Knot" have disagreed on the prospects of the bill proposed by Vladislav Davankov, a former presidential candidate, which gives schools and municipalities the right to ban the wearing of religious clothing.

September 21, 2024 23:56

News archive