Euro court fines Russia for ex-spy's inhumane jail
MOSCOW, July 19 (Reuters) Europe's human rights court today fined Russia for keeping in a dirty, cramped prison a former spy who once said he had information on the murder last year of fellow ex-KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko.
Colonel Mikhail Trepashkin, born in 1957, had written in a letter that the Kremlin had drawn up a list of enemies to kill which included Litvinenko.
But Russia barred British detectives last year from interviewing Trepashkin, when he was serving four years in a Urals prison for divulging state secrets, when they visited Russia to investigate the murder of Litvinenko by radiation poisoning in London.
Now the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights has fined Russia 3,000 euros for keeping Trepashkin in inhumane conditions.
''The Court concluded that, in Dmitrov Detention Centre, the applicant was kept in a poorly lit 6.6 sq metre cell without access to outside walks or physical exercise for 25 days,'' the court said in a statement.
''Furthermore, for 14 days, he was detained in a seriously overcrowded cell at the Volokolamsk Detention Centre, sometimes having as little as 1 sq metre of personal space, lacking even basic privacy.'' The court has fined Russia thousands of euros this year for human rights abuses in Chechnya. More cases are pending.
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