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UKRAINE: Conscientious objector told "to be ready to be taken to prison"

Source:                         www.forum18.org

Date:                              February 17, 2023

 



https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2810
By Felix Corley, Forum 18

Police in the south-western city of Ivano-Frankivsk have told 46-year-old
Protestant conscientious objector Vitaly Alekseenko "to be ready to be
taken to prison" at 9am on 20 February to begin his one-year jail term. "It
was not my decision," the police officer tasked with taking him to prison
told Forum 18. "The court gave me the decision to take him to prison. It's
my job to carry this out."

The police officer refused to say why Alekseenko is being jailed for
refusing on grounds of conscience a military call-up when he has said he is
ready to perform an alternative civilian service. "It's not for me to
comment on that," she told Forum 18 (see below).

Alekseenko said that the police would take him on 20 February direct to
Ivano-Frankivsk's Investigation Prison. "I'm preparing myself now," he told
Forum 18 (see below).

If police take Alekseenko to prison, this would be the first known time
since Russia renewed its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 that Ukraine
has jailed an individual for refusing on grounds of conscience a military
call-up (see below).

An official from the Defence Ministry Personnel Department – who did not
give his name – said that alternative civilian service does not exist in
wartime and that such individuals are dealt with through the courts. Asked
why Alekseenko and other conscientious objectors cannot be sent to work in
hospitals, for example, as they said they were ready for, the official
repeated his answer (see below).

On 16 January, Ivano-Frankivsk Appeal Court rejected Alekseenko's appeal
against his one-year jail term. The sentence went into force when he
collected the written verdict from the court on 24 January (see below).

"I told the court I agree that I have broken the law of Ukraine,"
Alekseenko told Forum 18 from Ivano-Frankivsk after the appeal hearing,
"but I am not guilty under the law of God. I want to be honest to myself."
He added that had he repented of his "crime", both the lower and the appeal
court would have given him a suspended sentence (see below).

Alekseenko told Forum 18 that he is preparing his further appeal to the
Supreme Court in Kyiv (see below).

"The imprisonment of Vitaly Alekseenko for a year will be a clear violation
of his right to freedom of conscience and a new indicator of serious
problems with human rights, democracy and rule of law in Ukraine," Yurii
Sheliazhenko, secretary of the Ukrainian Pacifist Movement, told Forum 18
from the capital Kyiv (see below).

"Conscientious objection to military service is not a crime, it is human
right [see below], and this human right should not be denied even in time
of war," Sheliazhenko added. "In fact, it is especially precious in times
of war and historically emerged exactly because of that, because challenges
of modern militarised economies became unbearable to the conscience of a
growing number of people" (see below).

"Unfortunately, the right to alternative service does not extend to martial
law," Viktor Yelensky, head of the State Service for Ethnic Policies and
Freedom of Conscience, told Forum 18. He said he is working to extend the
right for exemption from mobilisation, but "this requires the goodwill of
Parliament" (see below).

Alekseenko, an internally-displaced person from Donetsk Region, was
summoned to the recruitment office in Ivano-Frankivsk in June 2022. He
explained that because of his religious belief he cannot take up arms. He
was refused alternative civilian service and his case was handed to
prosecutors. On 15 September 2022, Ivano-Frankivsk City Court handed down
the one-year jail term (see below).

An official of the Ivano-Frankivsk City Recruitment Office said he was not
familiar with Alekseenko's case. "We're not competent to answer your
questions," the official told Forum 18 in January 2023. "We generally offer
alternative service to members of religious communities." The official
refused to say how many men had been able to opt for alternative civilian
service since the February 2022 renewed Russian invasion of Ukraine (see
below).

When Forum 18 asked the official why Alekseenko could not have been
assigned an alternative civilian service in a needed occupation at a time
of war, say at a hospital, the official did not explain why (see below).

In four earlier criminal cases in 2022, courts handed conscientious
objectors suspended prison sentences and terms of probation:

- 18 May 2022, Andrii Kucher, Mukachevo, suspended 4-year jail term;

- 21 June 2022, Dmytro Kucherov, Oleksandriia (Kirovohrad Region),
suspended 3-year jail term;

- 17 August 2022, Oleksandr Korobko, Mukachevo, suspended 3-year jail term;

- 22 August 2022, Maryan Kapats, Mukachevo, suspended 3-year jail term.

Kucherov, a member of Source of Life Pentecostal Church, bases his
objection to military service on his Christian faith. The court decisions
in the other three cases describe only the individuals' conscientious
objection to killing people.

The verdicts in all five known conscientious objector convictions are once
again accessible on the public online register of court verdicts run by the
State Court Administration in Kyiv. None of the five was available online
in mid-January (https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2803).

Since Russia's renewed invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and the
declaration of martial law in Ukraine, Recruitment Offices have summoned
thousands of Jehovah's Witness men. Prosecutors opened criminal cases
against 67 individuals, of which 44 have already been closed
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2803).

Three Jehovah's Witness young men are currently on trial under Criminal
Code Article 336 ("Refusing call-up for military service during
mobilisation or in a special period, and for military service during
call-up of reservists in a special period"). However, the long-running
trials do not appear to be close to a conclusion, Jehovah's Witnesses told
Forum 18.

Serious violations of freedom of religion and belief and other human rights
take place within all the Ukrainian territory Russia has illegally
occupied. Such violations include: closing and seizing places of worship
"disappearing" religious leaders, seizing religious literature, and
removing from libraries books on religion the Russian occupation
authorities regard as "extremist" (see below).

Limited peacetime access to conscientious objection to military service

Under a 10 November 1999 Cabinet of Ministers Decree, only men who belonged
to 10 specified religious communities that the state recognised as pacifist
were allowed to opt for alternative civilian service.

These communities are: Reformist Adventists; Seventh-day Adventists;
Evangelical Christians; Evangelical Christians–Baptists; "The Penitents"
or Slavic Church of the Holy Ghost; Jehovah's Witnesses; Charismatic
Christian Churches (and associated churches under their registered
statutes); Union of Christians of the Evangelical Faith – Pentecostals
(and associated churches under their registered statutes); Christians of
Evangelical Faith; Society for Krishna Consciousness.

Men who were not members of any of these 10 communities were not eligible
to apply for alternative service.

Forum 18 on 15 February asked Viktor Yelensky, head of the State Service
for Ethnic Policies and Freedom of Conscience since December 2022, if all
conscientious objectors to military service should be allowed to opt for
alternative civilian service. He did not answer this question.

Implementation of conscientious objection to military service

In Ukraine, everyone must register their home address with the authorities.
In addition, all men (including conscientious objectors to military
service) must also register with the local military Recruitment Office. All
men are then given a military card which states whether they are doing
military service, have done this, are exempt, are reservists, or have done
alternative service.

In Ukraine, conscientious objectors to military service have long faced
obstacles to doing alternative civilian service
(https://ebco-beoc.org/ukraine). The United Nations (UN) Human Rights
Committee in its 9 February 2022 Concluding Observations on Ukraine
(CCPR/C/UKR/CO/8
(https://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G22/253/69/PDF/G2225369.pdf?OpenElement))
stressed that "alternatives to military service should be available to all
conscientious objectors without discrimination as to the nature of their
beliefs justifying the objection (be they religious beliefs or
non-religious beliefs grounded in conscience)".

On 21 August 2022, the Ukrainian Defence Ministry told the Ukrainian
Pacifist Movement that during martial law the right to do alternative
civilian service has been suspended (see below).

The UN Human Rights Committee's General Comment 22 on Article 18 ("Freedom
of thought, conscience and religion") of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) notes that "this right is non-derogable
even during times of national emergency threatening the life of the nation"
(https://www.quno.org/sites/default/files/resources/QUNO%20Conscientious%20Objection%20-%20International%20Standards_Revised%202021_FINAL.pdf).

The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention stated in 2019
(https://www.quno.org/sites/default/files/resources/QUNO%20Conscientious%20Objection%20-%20International%20Standards_Revised%202021_FINAL.pdf)
that "the right to conscientious objection to military service is part of
the absolutely protected right to hold a belief under article 18 (1) of the
Covenant, which cannot be restricted by States".

Within Russia in its internationally-recognised boundaries, no legal or
practical provision exists for alternative civilian service during
mobilisation (https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2797), despite
the Constitution guaranteeing this right for every citizen.

Russia has within the Ukrainian territories it has illegally occupied since
2014 conscripted men into its armed forces (https://ebco-beoc.org/ukraine).
This is a crime under Geneva Convention (IV) relative to the Protection of
Civilian Persons in Time of War
(https://www.ohchr.org/en/instruments-mechanisms/instruments/geneva-convention-relative-protection-civilian-persons-time-war),
which covers the rights of civilians in territories occupied by another
state (described as "protected persons"). Article 51 states: "The Occupying
Power may not compel protected persons to serve in its armed or auxiliary
forces. No pressure or propaganda which aims at securing voluntary
enlistment is permitted."

An 11 May 2022 analytical report (A/HRC/50/43
(https://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G22/339/39/PDF/G2233939.pdf?OpenElement))
by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights notes that OHCHR has
documented that Russia has in the illegally-occupied Ukrainian territory of
Crimea seriously violated international human rights law by conscripting
over 3,000 men into the Russian armed forces.

Alternative civilian service "not applicable" under martial law

Following the renewed Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022,
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky signed a decree imposing martial law
for 90 days. All men between the ages of 18 and 60 were deemed eligible for
call-up in a general mobilisation and were banned from leaving the country.
The period of martial law was extended several times and is currently due
to end on 19 February 2023.

The Ukrainian Pacifist Movement expressed concern that during martial law
the Defence Ministry might not respect individuals' right to perform an
alternative civilian service if they cannot serve in the armed forces on
grounds of conscience. It wrote to the Defence Ministry on 26 July 2022.

In its 21 August 2022 response
(https://en.connection-ev.org/pdfs/2022-08-21_MOD-Ukraine.pdf), seen by
Forum 18, Colonel Oleg Khrystenko, Deputy Chief of the Main Personnel
Department of the General Staff, pointed out that under the Alternative
Service Law, men could opt for alternative service "if the performance of
military duty conflicts with their religious beliefs and these citizens
belong to religious organisations operating in accordance with the
legislation of Ukraine, whose creed does not allow the use of weapons".

However, Colonel Khrystenko insisted that because of the Russian invasion
and the declaration of martial law, regular conscription to military
service had been suspended, to be replaced by mobilisation. "Therefore,
based on the above, the implementation of the constitutional right of
citizens to undergo alternative (non‐military) service under the
conditions of the legal regime of martial law and during mobilisation, due
to the absence of conscription for term‐limited military service, is not
applicable."

Colonel Khrystenko added that the Mobilisation Training and Mobilisation
Law "does not provide for alternative (non‐military) service for
conscripts who are called up for military service during mobilisation".

A Defence Ministry official from the Personnel Department said Viktor
Savonik, who prepared the response on behalf of Colonel Khrystenko, had
been transferred to other duties. The official – who did not give his
name – insisted to Forum 18 on 15 February that the absence of a right to
alternative civilian service in time of war is in line with the
Constitution. He did not explain.

"Unfortunately, the right to alternative service does not extend to martial
law," Viktor Yelensky, head of the State Service for Ethnic Policies and
Freedom of Conscience, told Forum 18 on 14 February. "We are working to
exempt priests who cannot kill according to Canon Law and we are looking
for a way to deal with Christians applying for the alternative (civilian)
service. However, this requires the goodwill of Parliament."

Yurii Sheliazhenko of the Ukrainian Pacifist Movement argues that
alternative civilian service should be available in wartime also.
"Conscientious objection to military service is not a crime, it is human
right, and this human right should not be denied even in time of war," he
told Forum 18 on 15 February. "In fact, it is especially precious in times
of war and historically emerged exactly because of that, because challenges
of modern militarised economies became unbearable to the conscience of a
growing number of people."

 Alekseenko: Recruitment Office rejects alternative service request

Vitaly Vasilovich Alekseenko (born 2 December 1976) was living in Slovyansk
in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk Region when Russia began its renewed invasion
of Ukraine in February 2022. In 2017 he was registered with the Ukrainian
Conscription Office in Slovyansk, but was given not a military card.
However, he was given a certificate valid until 2022 confirming that he had
not served in the military in the 1990s in Uzbekistan, where he then lived,
on grounds of conscience.

Alekseenko fled to Ivano-Frankivsk in May 2022. The City Recruitment Office
summoned him on 2 June. He told them that he could not take up arms because
of his religious beliefs as a Christian. "I told them I was ready to do an
alternative service and wrote such a declaration," he told Forum 18. He
also explained that he had refused military service in Uzbekistan on
grounds of conscience.

"They told me that there is no certainty that I'm a believer," Alekseenko
told Forum 18 in December 2022
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2803). "They said that only
members of registered faiths have the right to do alternative service." He
said he believes in Jesus Christ and his command to resist evil without
violence and be peacemakers as outlined in the Sermon on the Mount. "But I
don't go to any church as they don't observe what Christ said."

The Recruitment Office summoned Alekseenko again on 6 June, telling him
they rejected his application for alternative service. When he refused to
be mobilised, officials called in the police.

An official of the Ivano-Frankivsk City Recruitment Office, who refused to
give his name, said he was not familiar with Alekseenko's case. "We're not
competent to answer your questions," the official told Forum 18 on 17
January 2023 (https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2803). "We
generally offer alternative service to members of religious communities."
The official refused to say how many men had been able to opt for
alternative civilian service since the February 2022 renewed Russian
invasion of Ukraine.

When Forum 18 told the official that Alekseenko's objections to serving in
the military are based on his religious beliefs, the official replied: "Let
him come in to us a second time." Told that Alekseenko is about to start
his prison term after his appeal was rejected, the official repeated that
he was unfamiliar with the circumstances of his case.

When Forum 18 asked the official why Alekseenko could not have been
assigned an alternative civilian service in a needed occupation at a time
of war, say at a hospital, the official did not explain why.

 Alekseenko: Criminal case, trial, conviction, jail sentence

The investigator told Alekseenko a criminal case would be launched against
him (https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2803) under Article 336
of the Criminal Code. This punishes "Refusing call-up for military service
during mobilisation or in a special period, and for military service during
call-up of reservists in a special period". Punishment is a jail term of
three to five years.

On the investigator's advice, Alekseenko pleaded guilty, but refused to
repent of his actions "because he is convinced that he behaved decently as
a Christian, followed the imperative of his conscience and did nothing
wrong", the Ukrainian Pacifist Movement said in a 9 November 2022 letter to
the United Nations Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine.

At his criminal trial at Ivano-Frankivsk City Court on 15 September 2022,
Judge Roman Khorostil found Alekseenko guilty
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2803) under Criminal Code
Article 336, according to the decision seen by Forum 18. It notes that
Prosecutor Olga Gazukina, who led the prosecution case in court, called for
a three-year suspended jail term.

However, Judge Khoristil ignored the Prosecutor's request and decided to
jail Alekseenko. He noted the pre-trial report that said that Alekseenko
did not represent a danger to society and reduced his sentence to a
one-year jail term. The verdict says that the term begins when Alekseenko
is actually detained.

Alekseenko appealed to Ivano-Frankivsk Appeal Court. After postponements
because of the lack of electricity, the appeal hearing finally took place
on 16 January 2023, according to court records. Volodymyr Povzlo was the
Presiding Judge, accompanied by Bogdan Kukurudz and Oleksandr Vasilev. The
hearing was open, Alekseenko told Forum 18, and friends attended the
hearing in his support.

"I told the court I agree that I have broken the law of Ukraine,"
Alekseenko told Forum 18 in January
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2803), "but I am not guilty
under the law of God. I want to be honest to myself." He added that had he
repented of his "crime", both the lower and the appeal court would have
given him a suspended sentence. "How could I do that when I am not guilty?"

The appeal court rejected an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief from
Sheliazhenko of the Ukrainian Pacifist Movement arguing that Alekseenko
should be acquitted. The Judges said that they know the law better,
Sheliazhenko noted.

One Judge asked Alekseenko how he could prove that killing people was
incompatible with his religious beliefs. He responded that if the court did
not believe him he would be unable to convince it. He again set out his
religious reasons for opposing military service. "Vitaliy's simpleness and
sincerity seemingly didn't impress the court," Sheliazhenko told Forum 18.

Presiding Judge Povzlo expressed displeasure that the court had received
messages from around the world in support of Alekseenko, Sheliazhenko told
Forum 18.

Alekseenko told Forum 18 on 15 February that he is preparing to lodge a
further appeal against his conviction and jailing to the Supreme Court in
Kyiv.

Alekseenko: Awaiting jail

Alekseenko collected the written appeal verdict – seen by Forum 18 - from
Ivano-Frankivsk Appeal Court on 24 January. The verdict then entered legal
force and he expected to be taken to jail to begin his sentence.

A police officer finally phoned Alekseenko on 13 February. She told him "to
be ready to be taken to prison" at 9am on 20 February to begin his one-year
jail term. "It was not my decision," the police officer tasked with taking
him to prison told Forum 18 from Ivano-Frankivsk on 14 February. "The court
gave me the decision to take him to prison. It's my job to carry this out."

The police officer refused to say why Alekseenko is being jailed for
refusing on grounds of conscience a military call-up when he has said he is
ready to perform an alternative civilian service. "It's not for me to
comment on that," she told Forum 18.

Alekseenko said that the police would take him on 20 February direct to
Ivano-Frankivsk's Investigation Prison. "I'm preparing myself now," he told
Forum 18.

An official from the Defence Ministry Personnel Department – who did not
give his name – told Forum 18 on 15 February that alternative civilian
service does not exist in wartime and that such individuals are dealt with
through the courts. Asked why Alekseenko and other conscientious objectors
cannot be sent to work in hospitals, for example, as they said they were
ready for, the official repeated his answer. He then put the phone down.

"The imprisonment of Vitaly Alekseenko for a year will be a clear violation
of his right to freedom of conscience and a new indicator of serious
problems with human rights, democracy and rule of law in Ukraine," Yurii
Sheliazhenko, secretary of the Ukrainian Pacifist Movement, told Forum 18
from Kyiv on 15 February.

Severe human rights violations in Russian-occupied Ukraine

Serious violations of freedom of religion and belief and other human rights
take place within all the Ukrainian territory Russia has illegally occupied
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?country=17). Such violations include:
closing and seizing places of worship "disappearing" religious leaders,
seizing religious literature, and removing from libraries books on religion
the Russian occupation authorities regard as "extremist".

Within the Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory of Crimea
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2774) these include: forced
imposition of Russian laws and restrictions on exercising human rights,
including freedom of religion or belief; jailing Muslim and Jehovah's
Witness Crimean prisoners of conscience; forcible closure of places of
worship; and fining people for leading meetings for worship without Russian
state permission.

Within the Russian-occupied Ukrainian region of Luhansk these have up to
the renewed 2022 invasion of Ukraine
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2721) included: rendering
illegal all Protestant and non-Moscow Patriarchate Orthodox communities; a
climate of fear about discussing human rights violations; repeated denials
of permission to a Roman Catholic priest to live in the region; and
increasing numbers of banned allegedly "extremist" books, including an
edition of the Gospel of John published in 1820. (END)

Reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in all Ukraine
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?query=&religion=all&country=88)

Full reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in
Russian-occupied Ukraine
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?query=&religion=all&country=17)

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