In the aftermath of the mass protests across Russia in recent weeks in support of jailed opposition politician Alexey Navalny, a number of protesters in Moscow are serving time in administrative custody. Currently, many of the detainees are being held at a special detention center located in Sakharovo — a village in an area just outside of the Russian capital known as New Moscow. According to multiple reports, police vans carrying detainees have been forced to wait in lines outside of the detention center for hours on end — and the detainees weren’t given food or water while waiting to be processed (they were only allowed out of the van when needed after cajoling the officers transporting them).
Mediazona editor-in-chief Sergey Smirnov found himself in a similar situation after he was sentenced to 25 days administrative arrest on February 3 for retweeting a post that was later deemed to incite participation in a pro-Navalny rally. The police van he was in remained parked outside the special detention center in Sakharovo for about three hours. Around 5:00 a.m. local time on February 4, he and 27 other detainees were placed temporarily in a holding cell meant to accommodate eight people — it had just four bunk beds, all without mattresses. Smirnov and the other detainees were moved to other cells around noon. Here’s what the conditions are like at the detention center in Sakharovo.
Update. The secretary of Moscow’s Public Monitoring Commission (ONK), Alexey Melnikov, told TASS that the problems at the special detention center in Sakharovo are due to the “lengthy procedure for registering detainees.”
The eight-person holding cell where 28 people were placed on the morning of February 4
The holding cell where Sergey Smirnov (in the coroner by the door) and other detainees were placed on the morning of February 4
Twenty-eight people trying to sleep in an eight-person holding cell
The cell where Sergey Smirnov was moved after being registered at the special detention center
Be warned. If you speak Russian, these videos contain language you may find offensive.
Videos filmed inside the women’s holding cell at the special detention center.
Update. Moscow police officials gave the following comment on the photographs from inside the special detention center in Sakharovo: “The photographs posted on some medial and Internet sites don’t objectively reflect the situation, since they were taken by citizens who were taken to the temporary detention center after court hearings and were awaiting registration.”
Read more about the protests and detentions
- ‘They put a bag over my head and beat me up’ Moscow protesters report torture and intimidation in police custody
- After the verdict Moscow’s crackdown on protesters following the Navalny ruling, in photos
- ‘We can’t succumb to provocations’ The Kremlin’s spokesman comments on the unauthorized protests in Moscow
- Editorial: Meduza stands with Mediazona editor-in-chief Sergey Smirnov
“Freedom for Navalny!” protests
On January 23 and 31, as well as on February 2, “Freedom for Navalny!” protests took place in more than 100 cities across Russia. Demonstrators took to the streets to oppose the jailing of opposition politician Alexey Navalny, who was remanded in custody immediately upon returning to Russia from Germany on January 17. On February 2, a Moscow court sentenced Navalny to two years and eight months in prison for violating the terms of his parole in Yves Rocher case. More than 10,000 people were detained throughout the country at the rallies in support of Navalny.