Human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov transferred to a psychiatric hospital
On 5 September 2024, law enforcement officers transferred human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov from Pre-Trial Detention Center #1 to Sverdlovsk Regional Clinical Psychiatric Hospital in Yekaterinburg, Russia. Neither Aleksei Sokolov nor his family and lawyer had been informed in advance about the transfer.
On 29 August 2024, the Leninsky District Court in the city of Yekaterinburg, in the Russian Federation, extended the pre-trial detention of human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov for three months, until 2 December 2024. Earlier in August, Aleksei Sokolov sent a letter to his son in which he reported receiving insults and threats, including those of sexual and sexualized violence, from other inmates in Pre-Trial Detention Center #1 in Yekaterinburg.
On 8 July 2024, Leninsky District Court in the city of Yekaterinburg, Russia, placed human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov under pre-trial detention until 1 September 2024. The human rights defender is being accused of “repeated demonstration of extremist symbols”, a criminal offence envisioned by part 1 of Article 282.4 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. Particularly, he is being targeted for posting links to Facebook on his Telegram channel; in 2022, the Russian Federation listed Meta, including Facebook and Instagram, as an extremist organization. If found guilty, Aleksei Sokolov can be sentenced to 4 years in prison.
Aleksei Sokolov is a human rights defender from Yekaterinburg, Russia, and the head of the human rights organization “Legal Basis.” For over 20 years, he has been protecting the rights of prisoners and documenting the violation of rights of the imprisoned population in Russia. He has used his Telegram-based media to bring attention to human rights abuses in detention centres.
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- 24 September 2024 : Human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov transferred to a psychiatric hospital
- 4 September 2024 : Aleksei Sokolov’s pre-trial detention extended until December 2024
- 12 July 2024 : Human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov detained for sharing links to Facebook-based content declared as “extremist” in Russia
On 5 September 2024, law enforcement officers transferred human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov from Pre-Trial Detention Center #1 to Sverdlovsk Regional Clinical Psychiatric Hospital in Yekaterinburg, Russia. Neither Aleksei Sokolov nor his family and lawyer had been informed in advance about the transfer.
Aleksei Sokolov is a human rights defender from Yekaterinburg, Russia, and the head of the human rights organization “Legal Basis.” For over 20 years, he has been protecting the rights of prisoners and documenting the violations of rights of the imprisoned population in Russia. He has used his Telegram-based media to bring attention to human rights abuses in detention centers.
On 10 September 2024, relatives of Aleksei Sokolov reported that on 5 September 2024, law enforcement authorities transferred the human rights defender from Pre-Trial Detention Center #1 to Sverdlovsk Regional Clinical Psychiatric Hospital in Yekaterinburg. The transfer was requested by the investigative department of the Leninskiy District for the purpose of a forensic psychiatric examination, despite the fact that the human rights defender has had no prior history of mental health issues. The law enforcement authorities failed to notify Aleksei Sokolov and his representatives, including close relatives and lawyers, about the upcoming transfer and forensic examination. The human rights defender’s relatives reported that Aleksei Sokolov has no prior history of mental health conditions that would justify such a transfer.
Upon being transferred to the medical facility, Aleksei Sokolov reported to his relatives that he is being detained in inhumane conditions with no storage locker, bedside table, windows to ventilate the room, or warm water; he is only allowed outdoor walks for 15 minutes a day. Upon his arrival at the medical facility, Aleksei Sokolov was forced to strip naked during a search conducted in the presence of multiple staff members from the hospital and the Federal Penitentiary Service. Human rights defenders reported to his relatives that the medical personnel are attempting to create a situation in which they can justify using psychiatric sedation against him.
Aleksei Sokolov was arrested and detained on 8 July 2024, accused of “repeated demonstration of extremist symbols,” a criminal offense under Part 1 of Article 282.4 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. He is specifically targeted for allegedly posting links on Facebook and sharing a logo in the Telegram-based channel “Human Rights Defenders of the Ural Region.” In 2022, the Russian Federation designated Meta, including Facebook and Instagram, as an extremist organization, exposing many social media users to potential administrative and criminal prosecutions.
Front Line Defenders is deeply concerned about the recent transfer of human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov to a psychiatric hospital and particularly alarmed by the reported harassment and the possible misuse of psychiatric treatments. It calls for his immediate and unconditional release and for the cessation of all forms of judicial harassment against Aleksei Sokolov, ensuring his safety and ability to continue his legitimate work in defending human rights. Front Line Defenders continues to raise concerns with the Russian authorities regarding the systemic misuse of laws countering extremism to silence and persecute human rights defenders within the country. Front Line Defenders calls upon the Russian Federation to enable peaceful and legitimate work of human rights defenders in the country.
On 29 August 2024, the Leninsky District Court in the city of Yekaterinburg, in the Russian Federation, extended the pre-trial detention of human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov for three months, until 2 December 2024. Earlier in August, Aleksei Sokolov sent a letter to his son in which he reported receiving insults and threats, including those of sexual and sexualized violence, from other inmates in Pre-Trial Detention Center #1 in Yekaterinburg.
On 31 July 2024, the Sverdlovskii District Court denied the appeal that Aleksei Sokolov and his lawyers filed to contest the pre-trial detention. The day before, on 29 July 2024, prison authorities subjected him to additional control and supervision under the “preventive registration” for extremism, based on the charges against him. The Head Department of the Penitentiary System of the Russian Federation in the Sverdlovsk Region imposed further scrutiny on Sokolov in Pre-Trial Detention Center #1 after he used a spare bed in his incarceration unit to store printed documents related to his criminal case.
Russian authorities arrested and detained Aleksei Sokolov on 8 July 2024, accusing him of “repeated demonstration of extremist symbols,” a criminal offense under Part 1 of Article 282.4 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. He is specifically targeted for allegedly posting links on Facebook and sharing a logo in the Telegram-based channel “Human Rights Defenders of the Ural Region.” In 2022, the Russian Federation designated Meta, including Facebook and Instagram, as an extremist organization, exposing many social media users to potential administrative and criminal prosecutions. In October 2023, Aleksei Sokolov became the first person ever sentenced to 5 days of detention for this, following his alleged posts on Telegram. He was found guilty of “demonstration of extremist symbols,” which, as a first-time offense, is regulated by Part 1, Article 20.3 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation. If convicted, Aleksei Sokolov faces up to four years in prison.
On 8 July 2024, Leninsky District Court in the city of Yekaterinburg, Russia, placed human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov under pre-trial detention until 1 September 2024. The human rights defender is being accused of “repeated demonstration of extremist symbols”, a criminal offence envisioned by part 1 of Article 282.4 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. Particularly, he is being targeted for posting links to Facebook on his Telegram channel; in 2022, the Russian Federation listed Meta, including Facebook and Instagram, as an extremist organization. If found guilty, Aleksei Sokolov can be sentenced to 4 years in prison.
Aleksei Sokolov is a human rights defender from Yekaterinburg, Russia, and the head of the human rights organization “Legal Basis.” For over 20 years, he has been protecting the rights of prisoners and documenting the violation of rights of the imprisoned population in Russia. He has used his Telegram-based media to bring attention to human rights abuses in detention centres.
On 8 July, 2024, the Leninsky District Court in the city of Yekaterinburg, Russia, placed human rigths defender Aleksei Sokolov under pre-trial detention until 1 September 2024. The trial lasted two days and was closed to the public and to the press at the request of the investigators. Over the course of the trial, the human rights defender was placed in a temporary detention ward. Aleksei Sokolov was first detained in 5 July 2024, after law enforcement officers raided his apartment in Yekaterinburg, and subjected him to physical violence, including beatings, threats, and harassment. The human rights defender reported that the law enforcement officers failed to inform him for the reasons of his detention. The video of Alexei Sokolov’s apartments’ raid was published after the raid by pro-governmental online media outlets. The authorities seized a number of documents, including an authority form to UN treaty bodies.
The human rights defender is being accused of “repeated demonstration of extremist symbols”, a criminal offence envisioned by part 1 of Article 282.4 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. Particularly, he is being targeted for allegedly posting links to Facebook, and posting a logo in the Telegram-based channel “Human Rights Defenders of the Ural Region.” In 2022, the Russian Federation listed Meta, including Facebook and Instagram, as an extremist organization and has since exposed many social media users to potential administrative and criminal prosecutions. In October 2023, Aleksei Sokolov was the first ever person to be sentenced to 5 days of detention for this, after his aformentioned alleged Telegram channel posts. He was found guilty of “demonstration of extremist symbols”, which, as a first-time offence is regulated by part 1, Article 20.3 of the Code of Administrative Offences of the Russian Federation.
The investigation alleged that Aleksei Sokolov posted 29 different links to Facebook in the “Human Rights Defenders of the Ural Region” channel, thereby distributing extremist symbols. The human rights defender shared in his letter that the prosecution is accusing him of having “circulated untrue information about the penitentiary system” through the Facebook links that he was accused of sharing. Aleksei Sokolov stated that he was about to reveal a CCTV recording of the violence and torture that law enforcement officers exercised against a detainee. He also stated that when his house was raided, the autorities addressed him by saying “we are fed up with you.”
Front Line Defenders expresses grave concern with the raid and subsequent detention of human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov, as it believes he is being persecuted for his legitimate and peaceful human rights work. Front Line Defenders continues to raise its concern with the Russian authorities continued use of “security laws” in order to silence and persecute human rights defenders within the country. Front Line Defenders is deeply concerned with the intensive targeting of human rights defenders in Russia, whose sole aim is to promote human rights and document human rights violations.
Front Line Defenders urges the authorities in the Russian Federation to:
- Immediately and unconditionally release human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov from custody, ensuring his physical and psychological safety;
- Drop all of the charges against Aleksei Sokolov;
- Cease the use of security laws to target human rights defenders for their non-violent and legitimate human rights work in Russia;
- Guarantee in all circumstances that all human rights defenders in the Russian Federation are able to carry out their legitimate human rights activities without fear of reprisals and free of all restrictions.