You're reading: Council of Europe says no improvements made to quality of Maidan investigations by Ukraine’s respective agencies

BRUSSELS - The Chair of the International Advisory Panel (IAP) on Ukraine, Nicolas Bratza, while addressing the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, presented the key findings of the Panel's report on the investigations into violence surrounding the Maidan events in 2013-2014.

Speaking in Strasbourg, Bratza said that the Panel’s report highlighted the issue of “impunity and lack of accountability of law enforcement officers: problems that had already been identified in relation to Ukraine in the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights,” the press service of the council said.

The panel discovered a lack of independence and effectiveness in the investigation and in particular a failure by the Ministry of Interior and the State Security Service of Ukraine to cooperate with the Prosecutor General’s Office, Bratza said.

He said the report, published on the 31st of March 2015, provoked a strong reaction from the Interior Ministry of Ukraine.

“The Panel had made numerous enquiries and visits to the Ministry, to which it received no satisfactory answers to dispel the clear impression of the lack of effective co-operation,” Bratza said.

He also said that the developments at the end of 2014 suggested better cooperation and were encouraging, but “these developments occurred ten months after the main Maidan events, during which time very limited progress has been made in the investigations.”

In conclusion, he commended the “genuine efforts, especially on the part of the representatives of the prosecuting authorities, to address more closely the international requirements which should govern the investigations.”

Among the encouraging changes, Bratza cited the creation of the Special Investigation Division in the Prosecutor General’s Office and the more active position adopted by the current Verkhovna Rada to improve the quality of the Maidan investigations.

“The Panel’s focus is now on the violent events in Odesa in May of last year,” he said. He expressed his hope that despite the strong public criticisms made by the Minister of Interior of the Panel’s work on Maidan, the Panel will receive from the authorities the full cooperation in its work that was promised by the Government of Ukraine.

The International Advisory Panel was constituted by the Secretary General of the Council of Europe to assess whether the investigations carried out by the national authorities into the violent incidents which took place during the Maidan demonstrations from 30 November 2013 to 21 February 2014 met the requirements of the European Convention on Human Rights and the case-law of the European Court. Following the publication of the Maidan-related report, the Panel has begun its review of the authorities’ investigations into the violent incidents in Odesa of 2 May 2014. That work continues and the Panel’s findings will be presented in early autumn 2015.