No to police state

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Civil campaign "No to police state"
Громадянська кампанія "Ні поліцейській державі"
Image used by activists during the campaign
DateMay 2010 (2010-05)
Location
Caused byThe death of student Igor Indylo in the police precinct of Shevchenkivskyi District, Kyiv
GoalsTo force government to conduct a proper investigation and punish guilty police officers
MethodsProtests
StatusUnfinished
Parties

Civil organizations:

Political parties:

Also:

  • students
  • journalists
  • relatives of people killed by the police
Lead figures
  • colonel Volodymyr Polishuk (Head of Community liaison center of Kyiv police)
  • major Petro Onyshenko

The "No to police state" (Ukrainian: Громадянська кампанія "Ні поліцейській державі", romanizedHromadianska kampaniia "Ni politseiskii derzhavi") campaign is a Ukrainian civil campaign against police brutality caused by the death of 20-year-old student Igor Indylo in the police precinct of Shevchenko District in Kyiv. The campaign has demanded a proper investigation into Indylo's death and the punishment of the people guilty in his death and other high-profile cases.

Background

Igor Indylo died in the police precinct of Shevchenkivskyi District, Kyiv on May 18, 2010. Civil activists and journalists considered his death a murder committed by constables Sergiy Pryhodko and Sergiy Kovalenko. His death captured public attention and started a civil campaign. An investigation and court process have been ongoing since January 2015. The courts have not determined the cause of death.

Timeline of Indylo's death

May 17

  • 18:00 - Igor Indylo with his friend Volodymyr Lesenko started celebrating Indylo's birthday in a dormitory of Kyiv Professional Pedagogical College. According to Lesenko's statement, they drank a liter of moonshine.
  • 18:20 - Indylo's claimed to have seen him lying on the floor of the corridor.
  • 20:00 - Near the dormitory, Indylo argued with security guard Dmytro Hvorostyna and constable Sergiy Pryhodko.
  • 20:15 - Indylo (with no assistance) and Lesenko voluntarily sat in the constables' car and went to the police precinct of Shevchenkivskyi District.
  • 20:20 - The commander of the dormitory Zinaida Fedoryna called to Pryhodko and asked to release Igor. Pryhodko refused.
  • 20:38 - Indylo, Lesenko and Pryhodko arrived at the police precinct. According to forensics, Indylo had approximately 3 ppm of alcohol. Surveillance camera records do not appear to show Indylo walking drunkenly.
  • 21:00 - Indylo fell for the first time in the precinct. The cause of the fall is unknown. Policemen claim that he became unconscious, and an ambulance was called.
  • 21:49 - Surveillance cameras recorded Pryhodko dragging Indylo to the room for administrative detainees.
  • 22:11 - Indylo started moving after laying motionless on the floor for 20 minutes. If he was drunk, as policemen claimed, he would sleep soundly; if injuries were putting pressure on the brain, such behavior would be possible.

May 18

  • 00:30 - The constable returned to the dormitory. He said Indylo was sleeping.
  • 01:23 - Indylo fell from the bench. This caused a closed head injury with fractures of the skull base.
  • 03:00 - Indylo did not move. According to forensics, he died approximately at this time.
  • 04:51 - Indylo was noticed by policeman Oleksiy Zhizherin. He turned Indylo on the back with his foot. He realized that Indylo was injured and called an ambulance.
  • 05:14 - Paramedics stated that Indylo was dead. They said that the cause of death was choking on his vomit.
  • 05:30 - Policemen woke students in the dormitory and took them to the precinct to take statements from them.
  • 06:00 - Police management held an emergency meeting.

Versions

Police

Police made no statements in the first days after Indylo's death,[1] but media attention forced police to make a statement on May 26. The Shevchenkivskyi chief of police Petro Miroshnychenko announced: "We know that Indylo fell three times. First, he was seen laying on the floor in the dormitory. Second, he fell in the presence of his friend. Third, he has fallen from the bench in the police precinct from a height of approximately half a meter."[citation needed]

Ukraine Parliamentary Commissioner for Human Rights

On June 2, Ukraine Parliamentary Commissioner for Human Rights Nina Karpachova stated that Indylo's death was a murder and police will try to "hush up" the case.[2]

Society and media

Activists of the "No to police state" campaign pointed out controversial facts of Indylo's death and accused policemen of the police of murder.

On June 18 during a press conference in Kyiv, journalists announced the results of their own investigation. Journalist

Dmytro Gnap
announced that Indylo was most likely pushed hard, he hit the wall and became unconscious because the right half of his brain was injured. A brain hemorrhage started and lasted for nearly 7 hours. Then Indylo was dragged to the room for administrative detainees and left to die. Gnap also announced that Indylo was not tortured and other journalists, who took part in investigation, agreed with him.

MP Yurii Karmazin announced that he did not believe Indylo's injuries to be accidental. According to his experience in law enforcement, such injuries cannot be caused by the fall to the floor. Journalist Olena Bilozerska and human rights activist Tetyana Yablonska also believed that Indylo was tortured.

Goals

According to activists, their goal is to punish all involved in high-profile cases of police brutality. Among these cases are:

By June 2010, the demands of activists became more global. They started demanding police reform and amendments to laws. Activists demanded:

  • The strengthening of punishment for misconduct, especially for tortures;
  • The expansion of the powers of the Ukraine Parliamentary Commissioner for Human Rights, especially concerning the prevention and combating of torture by policemen;
  • The reestablishment of public councils in all territorial divisions of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and establishment of transparent mechanisms for public access to monitor police work.

Timeline of campaign

Sticker of campaign asking people to come to a protest action
The banner of protest action with text "No to police state"
2010
From 2011

Links

References