6 Jan 2011

Russian authorities investigate child abuse allegations in unlicensed orphanage in monastery, nun says it is persecution


Interfax - Russia October 21, 2010


Investigative Committee to probe claims of child abuse at Russian monastery


Moscow -- Russia's Investigative Committee has launched a probe in the wake of media reports of child abuse at the Svyato-Bogolyubovsky Monastery in Vladimir Region.

"All media claims about child abuse at the monastery will be checked and assessed, which will be followed by a procedural decision," Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin told Interfax on Thursday.

The pre-investigation check will be conducted by Vladimir regional investigators.

It was reported on October 20 that the Prosecutor General's Office would look into the claims.

"We will certainly respond to all of the legal violations reported by the media. Doubtlessly, we will investigate the claims reported by the Izvestia newspaper," spokeswoman Marina Gridneva told Interfax on Wednesday.

The Izvestia daily reported on Wednesday, citing the mother of an allegedly abused girl, that children were frequently heard crying and their arms and legs were covered in bruises after being beaten.

Children were forced to bow up to 500 times as a form of punishment and worked in the fields from morning till night, the newspaper reported.

One girl, named Marina Loyko, claimed that she was forced to eat a cupful of salt, was beaten with a belt and was deprived of food and sleep for misbehaving, Izvestia reported.

A request has been made to the local authorities to transfer the children to a boarding school in the nearby town of Suzdal.

The Russian Public Chamber told Interfax earlier that it would look into the allegations.

An independent inquiry will also be conducted by the office of Pavel Astakhov, the Kremlin's children's rights commissioner.

The monastery itself has dismissed the reports.

"Officially, the orphanage of the Svyato-Bogolyubsky Monastery has long been closed, there are no children on its grounds, and reports about cruel treatment of orphans are a lie and slander," nun Antonia (Davidkovskaya) said onEkho Moskvy radio.

"Someone needed to spark a scandal to recall last year's events," she said.

"Even though everything was proven and several commissions checked that no measures were used against the children, and there were no cruelties against the minors. It is simply someone working against the monastery and the Orthodox Church in general," she said.

"Almost all children left the monastery last year and the order to shut down the orphanage was received this year," the nun said.

It was reported on Wednesday that two orphans escaped from the monastery.

Father Vitaly Rysev, head of the Suzdal District of the Vladimir Diocese, believes children are still living at the monastery.

"Then who made the escape on October 3? There were three orphans from the 11th grade left, and two of them escaped from this orphanage on October 3 this year to a police station, gave all the evidence, all this was recorded, then they were transferred by custody agencies to our school. So there were at least three orphans on October 3," he told Interfax-Religion.

"Legally, there has never been any orphanage in Bogolyubovo, even though one existed" and "over the eleven-year period of its work more than 40 children escaped from there, but it was never registered legally, it operated with full connivance of custody officials from the diocese's education department, with not a single licensing document," he claimed.

"So if you bring the logic of nun Antonia to conclusion, there was never any orphanage, but in reality it did exist and was a cause of big woes and tragedies, and that is now a subject of investigation by law enforcement agencies," the priest said.

This article was found at:

http://www.interfax-religion.com/?act=news&div=7828

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Interfax - Russia October 25, 2010

Human rights commissioner says abuse did take place at Russian Orthodox monastery


Moscow, October 25, Interfax - An inquiry ordered by Russian human rights commissioner Vladimir Lukin has found that child abuse did take place at Vladimir region's Svyato-Bogolyubsky Monastery.

"The children who previously lived at the monastery told about the abuse they were subjected to by their teachers. They were hit multiple times, forced to do agricultural labor from 3 a.m. till 10 p.m. with 30-minute breaks for breakfast and lunch. They were locked up on the second floor of a cowshed, being deprived of food with only water and dry bread to eat for 16 days in a row. Corporal punishment with 12, 50, 70 strikes with a belt counted aloud by the teacher. Reading aloud psalms until 2 a.m. while having to wake up at 5:30 a.m.," Lukin's spokesperson said in a statement, citing the results of the inquiry.

Several boarders remained after the monastery was closed, the statement said.

"An 18-year-old girl quizzed by the commission said that she remained at the monastery voluntarily. She is studying in the 11th grade externally and has no passport, medical policy unlike many others who live at the monastery," it said.

The commission also found that after the monastery closed, "children were sent to a boarding school in the village of Mikhali and with a cadet corpus in the village of Raduzhny, and some of the children live with families and study at the Novoselskaya School externally.

"According to the monastery's abbess, some of the children were handed over to guardians and parents in other towns," the statement said.


This article was found at:

http://www.interfax-religion.com/?act=news&div=7844

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Interfax - Russia October 27, 2010


Criminal case opened over allegations of child abuse at Svyato-Bogolyubsky monastery


Moscow, October 27, Interfax - Investigators in the Vladimir Region launched a criminal investigation on charges of false imprisonment following the claims made by orphans from the Svyato-Bogolyubsky convent about being mistreated, Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said.

"To ensure full and objective verification of the claimants' arguments and clarify all circumstances a criminal investigation has been launched under Article 127 of the Russian Penal Code (false imprisonment of a minor)," Markin told Interfax on Wednesday.

In early October 2010 orphans from the Svyato-Bogolyubsky convent in the Vladimir Region reported problems they were facing while staying at the convent, in particular, possible violation of their rights.

"Under the current criminal procedural laws, special investigations, tests and other procedures are only allowed as part of a criminal case," Markin said.

Investigators have already commissioned a number of forensic tests, including a medical one to examine the health condition of one of the orphans, he said.

"Investigators are also planning to investigate the living conditions in which the orphans were raised at the convent, the motives of their complaints to law enforcement authorities and to qualify the actions by individuals responsible for their upbringing," the Investigative Committee official said.

It was reported earlier that an inquiry ordered by Russian Human Rights Commissioner Vladimir Lukin found that child abuse did take place at Svyato-Bogolyubsky Monastery.

"The children who previously lived at the monastery told about the abuse they were subjected to by their teachers. They were hit multiple times, forced to do agricultural labor from 3 a.m. till 10 p.m. with 30-minute breaks for breakfast and lunch. They were locked up on the second floor of a cowshed, being deprived of food with only water and dry bread to eat for 16 days in a row. Corporal punishment with 12, 50, 70 strikes with a belt counted aloud by the teacher. Reading aloud psalms until 2 a.m. while having to wake up at 5.30 a.m.," Lukin's spokesperson said in a statement, citing the results of the inquiry.

This article was found at:

http://www.interfax-religion.com/?act=news&div=7849
 

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