European lawmakers to consider resolution on "rights abuses" in Crimea:
By Rikard Jozwiak
BRUSSELS -- The European Parliament is scheduled to debate and vote on a resolution highlighting what European lawmakers say are human rights abuses by Russian-installed authorities in Ukraine's occupied Crimean Peninsula.
The October 5 session in Strasbourg will focus on the arrests and trials of figures like RFE/RL journalist Mykola Semena and Crimean Tatar leaders Akhtem Chiygoz and Ilmi Umerov since the Ukrainian peninsula was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.
“Semena is a very important person in terms for free journalism and his court trial [on separatism charges] should be condemned by the free world because, first of all, his activity was clearly, purely noble -- fulfilling his professional obligations," said Anna Fotyga, Poland's former foreign minister and a current member of the European Parliament.
The drafting of the resolution was expected to take place during the next week.
Lawmakers who are expected to take part in drafting the resolution told RFE/RL that they expect it will accuse Russia of violating the rights of Semena and others in Crimea who have publicly opposed Russia's military seizure and annexation of the Ukrainian peninsula.
They said they expect the resolution will call on Russia to annul the 2 1/2-year suspended sentence and ban on future journalistic activity that Russian-installed judges issued against Semena earlier this month.
Nils Muiznieks, the human rights commissioner of the Council of Europe, told RFE/RL on September 26 that Russia is the only member of the 47-country Council of Europe that has not cooperated with his office in the last few years.
The UN Human Rights Office on September 25 said the situation in Crimea "has significantly deteriorated" under Russian occupation.
It said "grave human rights violations, such as arbitrary arrests and detentions, enforced disappearances, ill-treatment and torture, and at least one extra-judicial execution were documented."
Russia seized Crimea in March 2014, sending in troops and staging a referendum denounced as illegal by dozens of countries, after Ukraine's pro-Russia former president, Viktor Yanukovych, was ousted from power by mass protests in Kyiv.
The European Union, along with the United States and other Western countries, have imposed sanctions against Russia in response to the takeover of the Ukrainian territory.
City councilor shot dead after interview on corruption:
By RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service
CHERKASY, Ukraine -- Officials in the central Ukrainian city of Cherkasy say a municipal councilor has been shot dead just hours after the broadcast of a television interview he gave about corruption within the city’s utility services.
Local police said Mykhaylo Binusov, head of the Cherkasy branch of the Ukrainian Union of Patriots (UKROP) party, died at the scene of the shooting late on September 28.
The were no immediate arrests in connection with the killing, which police said was carried out by “unknown assailants.”
Police said Binusov’s death was being investigated as a case of “premeditated murder."
Binusov had been appointed on September 22 as the acting director of a city council department that oversees the management and operations of municipal utility services.
Cherkasy Mayor Anatoliy Bondarenko said Binusov's main task at that point was to bring an end to corruption with the utility services.
Bondarenko also said Binusov was expected to be elected as the secretary of the city council within the next few days.
The city council on September 29 was scheduled to conduct an extraordinary session to discuss what local lawmakers described as an "apparent assassination." (w/UNIAN)