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Estonian PM: no cover-up in Harku case

BC, Tallinn, 06.05.2016.Print version
There has been no-cover up by the authorities when it comes to the solving of a situation at the Harku detention center for illegal migrants in Estonia in November 2015, Estonian Prime Minister Taavi Roivas said at the government press conference on May 5th, cites LETA/BNS.

Roivas said he has received a detailed account of the events from the Police and Border Guard Board, an internal probe at which has established that a more forceful response was given at Harku than the situation would have solicited.

 

While it is important that every such case is used to learn from it, it is also important that representatives of public authority had the capability to quickly get the situation under control when an incident occurs, the head of government said.

 

Roivas said the Police and Border Guard Board has assured him that there has been no intentional lying or cover-up.

 

"While there have been claims of the opposite in the media, on Thursday morning the head of the Police and Border Guard Board unambiguously refuted them," he said.

 

The prime minister also pointed out that incorrect information has started to spread in relation to the Harku detention center, such as that there are no toys available to children there or that the asylum seekers are offered only food containing pork.

 

"All the occupants of the center are offered the possibility to choose from three menus – a vegetarian menu, a non-pork menu, and the regular menu," Roivas said.

 

On Wednesday, commenting on an article published in the weekly newspaper Eesti Ekspress, a senior representative of the police admitted that in the opinion of experts the use of rubber bullets at the Harku detention center ran counter to the Law Enforcement Act.

 

"In the course of an ex-post examination of the events the use of a firearm loaded with rubber bullets was analyzed the most. After making an ex-post evaluation of the circumstances of the event and the tactics chosen by the police, experts took the stance that the use of a firearm, although loaded with rubber bullets, was not consistent with the Law Enforcement Act," Valdo Poder, head of the law enforcement office and crisis management team at the North prefecture of the Police and Border Guard Board, said in a press release.

 

According to Eesti Ekspress, the police internal control service established based on CCTV footage that the person eventually hit by the rubber bullet stood calmly in one place during the episode that lasted a couple of seconds and there was no waving of hands or shouting.

 

The weekly said the events got their start when police personnel at the detention center approached a Congolese man with a paper with a judge's decision extending his detention by two months to get the man's signature. The man refused to put his signature on the paper on the grounds that he did not understand the text written in Estonian. The conflict then allegedly turned violent as other detainees stepped in, refusing to vacate the dining and recreation area and go to their rooms.

 

"The events got their start from the separation of one aggressive detainee from the others, which led to the frustration of other detainees and their refusal to obey the orders of officials. There were altogether more than 30 people on the second level of the center, 13 of whom stood in the corridor and refused to leave despite repeated orders to do it. Following negotiations that lasted more than two hours, not all detainees would go into their rooms and rapid response personnel entered the [building's second] level," Poder said.

 

"It can be seen on the video recording that when the police entered the level one man was standing in the corridor and another detainee was exiting a room. Immediately afterwards the police officer fired a warning shot towards the floor and the rubber bullet hit the leg of a detainee after ricochet. The movement of the last detainees into their rooms, however, did not mean that the situation had been conclusively resolved for the police. For that all the rooms and all the individuals had to be additionally checked by taking them first to the dining hall and then back to their room one by one," Poder said.

 

Eesti Ekspress said that when suppressing the unrest at the Harku facility near Tallinn in last November the police made several errors in management, fired rubber bullets at a peaceful person and later lied about the events.






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