Latest Breaking News On - Magomed gadaev - Page 3 : comparemela.com
A réécouter - Maître Arnaud Toulouse, avocat d un tchétchène vivant à Limoges expulsé de la France
francebleu.fr - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from francebleu.fr Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Deux étrangers expulsés vers la Russie et le Pakistan
lefigaro.fr - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lefigaro.fr Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
might
face torture in Russia.
On April 11, Chechen police abducted Magomed Gadaev, an asylum seeker from Chechnya and a key witness in a high-profile torture investigation against Chechnya’s authorities, two days after he was wrongfully deported from France to Russia on 9 April. Chechen police continue to hold him in custody.
French authorities proceeded with Gadaev’s expulsion, despite the decision by the national asylum court to prohibit his expulsion due to substantiated fears for his life and safety taken on March 10, 2021. French authorities’ actions have put him at immediate risk of torture and other ill-treatment and exposed him to a grave danger to his life. This is in flagrant violation of France’s international obligations prohibiting the return of any person, whatever the circumstances, to a territory where they are at risk of serious human rights violations. This prohibition is a non-derogable norm of international law and is affirmed by numerous human rights
Douze ONG internationales condamnent l expulsion du Tchétchène Magomed Gadaev de Limoges vers la Russie
lepopulaire.fr - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lepopulaire.fr Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
France has been criticised for deporting Chechen refugee Magamoed Gadaev to Russia despite several court rulings saying he should not be expelled, human rights groups said.
In 2010, Gadaev fled to Poland from Chechenya, Russia’s Muslim-majority southern region, where he served a prison sentence for alleged ties with separatists. He says he was tortured in prison.
Gadaev was granted asylum in Poland before moving to France, where he became a witness in prominent torture cases involving Chechen security forces. Due to the persecution he has suffered in the past and his role as a witness in cases of torture committed by the Chechen authorities, Magomed Gadaev is in danger of being tortured again and, possibly, even killed, warned Amnesty International.