Suicide of Aleksandr Dolmatov

Aleksandr Yuryevich Dolmatov (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ю́рьевич Долма́тов; 12 September 1976 17 January 2013 Rotterdam) was a Russian opposition activist.[1] Dolmatov committed suicide in a Dutch detention centre.[1]

Biography

Dolmatov was born on 12 September 1976. In 2004 he took a job at a government-owned defense firm Tactical Missiles Corporation.[2]

Oppositional activities

Dolmatov was a member of the unregistered National Bolshevik Party and the opposition party The Other Russia.[3]

Beginning in 2010 Dolmatov took part in all actions of Strategy-31, a series of civic protests in Moscow.[2] Dolmatov was repeatedly detained during Strategy-31 actions.

Dolmatov had participated in the so-called "March of Millions", an opposition demonstration on 6 May 2012 which resulted in clashes with police. Dolmatov was detained by police.

Death

Dolmatov went to the Netherlands in June 2012, fearing arrest in Russia. He sought political asylum there, but in December the Immigration and Naturalisation Service turned down his application. Dolmatov was found dead in a Rotterdam deportation centre early on 17 January 2013.[4]

On 18 April 2013, the State Secretary for the Security and Justice, Fred Teeven, survived a vote of no confidence on his handling of asylum seekers; the debate was called following a Dutch government agency investigation of the suicide of Dolmatov found that multiple parts of the Dutch immigration system failed him, including medical, legal and state organizations.[1]

Reactions

On 18 January 2013, opposition activists picketed the Dutch Embassy in Moscow[5] and Saint Petersburg,[6] Russia and Kiev,[7] Ukraine in memory of Aleksandr Dolmatov. Some observers remained convinced that Dolmatov committed suicide under duress after being approached twice by secret police.[8][9]

Dolmatov's lawyer Yevgeny Arkhipov criticised the Dutch decision to place him in a deportation centre.[8]

Russia's Foreign Ministry said it had demanded the Netherlands investigate Aleksandr Dolmatov's death.[10][11]

The Dutch ambassador to Moscow said that Dolmatov's death was not triggered by the refusal to grant him asylum in the Netherlands.[12] The Dutch Queen Beatrix called the suicide of Dolmatov a "great tragedy".[13][14][15]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Junior justice minister survives debate over Dolmatov suicide, DutchNews.nl (19 April 2013)
    Dutch investigation divides blame for Russian dissident Dolmatov’s death; gov’t to pay damages, The Washington Post (12 April 2013)
  2. 1 2 Посадили бы и прессовали по полной программе
  3. Мать Долматова написала письмо королеве Нидерландов
  4. Первая смерть в «болотном деле»
  5. В Москве прошла акция памяти Александра
  6. Петербургские другороссы провели акцию памяти Александра Долматова у консульства Нидерландов
  7. (Dutch) Teeven stelt onderzoek in naar dood Russische asielzoeker 'die onterecht vastzat', NRC Handelsblad (18 January 2013)
    Picket in memory about the Russian member of the opposition Aleksandr Dolmatov, UNIAN (18 January 2013)
  8. 1 2 Правозащитники требуют от Голландии ответить за гибель Долматова
  9. Эдуард Лимонов о суициде Александра Долматова: «Сашу допрашивали с пристрастием»
  10. Москва потребовала от Нидерландов расследовать смерть Долматова
  11. Москва требует скорейшего расследования смерти оппозиционера Долматова
  12. Власти Нидерландов не связывают самоубийство Александра Долматова с отказом в предоставлении ему политического убежища в стране
  13. Королева Нидерландов прокомментировала смерть Долматова: «большая трагедия» и «сложный случай»
  14. Beatrix: dood Dolmatov tragedie
  15. Королева Нидерландов ответила на обращение матери А.Долматова

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.