Okrestina Detention Centre, Akrestsina Detention Centre, officially, the Criminal Detention Centre of the
Minsk Executive Committee’s
Main Internal Affairs Directorate (
Belarusian: Цэнтра ізаляцыі правапарушальнікаў ГУУС Мінгарвыканкама,
Russian: Центр изоляции правонарушителей ГУВД Мингорисполкома), is a pre-trial detention centre in
Minsk,
Belarus. The prison is known as a detention centre for activists of the Belarusian opposition arrested during mass protests against the government of president
Alexander Lukashenko. On 21 June 2021, the
U.S. Treasury has added Okrestina Detention Centre to its
Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List.[1]
Name
The prison is most commonly referred by its informal name Okrestina (
Russian: Окрестина) or Akrestsina (
Belarusian: Акрэсціна, official transliteration: Akrescina) derived from the name of the street where it is located (which is in turn named after Soviet
WWIIground-attack pilot,
hero of the Soviet UnionBoris Okrestin [
ru]).
Many were beaten and in some cases seriously injured. At least three detainees suffered injuries indicative of sexual violence in Okrestino or on the way there. The victims were hospitalized with intramuscular bleeding of the rectum, anal fissure and bleeding, and damage to the mucous membrane of the rectum.[6]
On the night of August 13–14, 2020, relatives of people detained in Okrestino recorded the sounds of incessant beatings that could be clearly heard on the street. Several voices can also be heard on the recordings, screaming in pain and begging for mercy. One released inmate reported that those who begged officers not to be beaten were beaten even more severely.[7]
On September 29, 2020, detainee Dsjanis Kusnjazou was hospitalized from Okrestino with fractures of the skull bones, third-degree open craniocerebral trauma, hematomas, rib fractures, and pulmonary contusion. He succumbed to his injuries. Security authorities claimed the injuries were due to Kusnjazou falling from his bunk bed.[8]
In October 2020, Okrestina's Detention Centre head Ivan Sakalouski (Sokolovskiy) was sanctioned by the European Union,[11] the United Kingdom,[12] Canada[13] and Switzerland.[14][15] More Okrestina officials were banned from entering the European Union in June 2021[16] and the United States in August 2021.[17]
The U.S. Treasury gave the following motivation for including Okrestina to its
SDN list in June 2021:
Following the peaceful protests against the fraudulent August 9, 2020 presidential election, many protesters have been arrested and subsequently detained at the notorious Akrestsina Detention Center (Akrestsina) in Minsk. Protesters have described intense physical abuse, including torture and inhumane conditions during their detention at Akrestsina. It has been the site of beatings, arbitrary detentions, and other human rights abuses in the months since the fraudulent presidential election.
Akrestsina is being designated pursuant to E.O. 13405 for having materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or services in support of, human rights abuses related to political repression in Belarus.[18]
In November 2021, Belarusian President
Alexander Lukashenko confirmed in an interview to the
British Broadcasting Corporation that people were beaten in Okrestino, saying: "OK, OK, I admit it, I admit it. People were beaten in the Okrestina detention centre. But there were police beaten up too and you didn't show this."[19]
Famous Inmates
Leaders and participants of the
2006,
2010, and
2020 opposition protests, who were detained in Okrestina: