106. Telegram From the Embassy in Czechoslovakia to the Department of State and Multiple Diplomatic Posts1
2811. Subject: Husak Regime Tightens Internal Control. Ref: (A) Prague 2595 Notal; (B) Prague 2782.2
Summary: Czechoslovak and Polish police have, for the first time, prevented a meeting of Charter 77 and KOR human rights activists. Moreover, Czech police have not only beaten and incarcerated Charter spokesman Sabata but have also begun generally to tighten surveillance over nonsanctioned cultural activities of Charter 77 supporters in Prague. This message reports developments symptomatic of the current crackdown. End summary.
1. Addressees will be aware of reports that Czechoslovak and Polish authorities prevented planned third meeting of Charter 77 and KOR (Workers Defense Committee) reps weekend of October 1–2 and Charter spokesman Jaroslav Sabata was detained and beaten.
2. We have obtained copy of bulletin no. 41 of Committee for Protection of Unjustly Persecuted (Prague 1339 Notal),3 small offshoot of Charter movement. Bulletin gives account of events based on report by Vaclav Havel, who was among Chartists attempting to meet with Poles, and other, unidentified, sources.
3. That account says meeting was supposed to take place October 1 on trail of Czechoslovak-Polish friendship in Krkonos mountains. (This is approximately same area as that where first meeting was held.) Area was full of uniformed and plainclothes police from both countries who checked papers of everyone entering area. Six Chartists, including Sabata and Havel, and a student attempted to reach rendezvous by various means. Some were detained by police, while others withdrew when they saw meeting was impossible. Chartist Jiri Bednar was [Page 313] detained and questioned several hours in tourist kiosk, from which he says he saw Polish police round up KOR members Jan Litynski, Adam Michnik and Piotr Naimsky. Detained Czechs were held in various places for up to 59 hours and most then released. Sabata, however, was held first in village jail and punched about by uniformed police, then reportedly was transferred to Ministry of Justice jail in Hradec Kralove. There he is said to have been officially charged with violating two articles of penal code relating to using force and verbal abuse against public officials. This account leaves unclear whether Sabata still in detention, but rumors in Prague as of October 6 say he is. Account concludes by denying that Sabata in any way resisted police and stating he is being persecuted. It proclaims development of cooperation between Czechoslovak and Polish human rights supporters cannot be stopped.
4. Comment: Whether or not meeting of Polish and Czechoslovak Party Ideological Secretaries last month (ref A) led to this cooperative move against dissidents, such cooperation is obviously under way. Report cited above also says police were allegedly also watching other border tourist areas suitable for meeting, but we suspect police had enough information from Charter leaks to pinpoint actual rendezvous. Beating of Sabata could have been action of undisciplined rural police, but placing of formal charges against him almost certainly was directed from Prague. It suggests authorities have become sufficiently concerned about developing Charter-KOR ties to shift to heavyhanded efforts to intimidate potential participants in future border meetings. End comment.
5. In other Chartist activity, Pavel Kohout has renewed his quest for permission for self and wife to make short visit to Western Europe and the United States, but so far has received no travel documentation. His daughter Teresa tells us Kohout and wife would like to depart the week of October 16 for Switzerland (where Kohout may wish to visit another daughter presently studying in Geneva, as well as his Swiss publisher). Comment: Kohout has been telling friends he hopes to return to Prague after forthcoming visits to the West, but we doubt he will be able to do so in light of longstanding warnings from Party officials that if he leaves, he cannot return.
6. Teresa Kohoutova indicates police have begun to intimidate those involved in recent productions of Macbeth. She was taken from a family dinner party October 5 for three hours’ interrogation, including threats to desist from further non-sanctioned acting. She reports Vlasta Chromastova, talented former actress who has been playing Lady Macbeth in Kohout’s version of the Shakespeare classic, has also been interrogated at length. Moreover, police recently broke up a performance of the play, and when it was rescheduled, blocked would-be audience from attending it.
[Page 314]7. We understand artist Karel Havlicke and wife, who applied for emigration permission some weeks ago, have been told they will “never” receive exit documentation, but this appears not to have been a formal statement. If Havlickes are, in fact, refused exit permits, it will run counter to trend we thought developing (ref B) of regime’s increasing resort to emigration as one way to cope with dissidents.
8. Comment. We see numerous signs at present of increasing activism by internal security agents. The beating of Sabata and apparent overall tightening of controls over machinations of Charter 77 personalities are the most dramatic evidence of this trend. We believe it is mainly increased politicizing of the Charter 77 movement—especially the August 10th anniversary statement calling for withdrawal of Soviet troops and recent efforts to coordinate human rights appeals with Polish and other Eastern European activists—that has led to the current crackdown. We wonder whether much-publicized tightening of internal security controls over foreign representatives in Washington, resulting for example in protracted delay of visa issuance to GOC LOS delegate Richard Kral, may also be contributing to a strengthening of internal security measures here.
- Source: National Archives, RG 59, Central Foreign Policy File, D780417–1198. Confidential. Sent to Belgrade, East Berlin, Bern, Bonn, Bucharest, Budapest, London, Moscow, Paris, Rome, Sofia, Warsaw, Munich, USNATO, and West Berlin.↩
- Telegram 2595 from Prague, September 22, reported the meeting between Czechoslovak Party Secretary Jan Fojtik and Polish First Secretary Edward Gierek in Poland. (National Archives, RG 59, Central Foreign Policy File, D780390–0706) Telegram 2782 from Prague, October 6, reported “unusual willingness of GOC to permit emigration, particularly of people who have evinced disaffection with system.” (National Archives, RG 59, Central Foreign Policy File, D780412–0226)↩
- In telegram 1339 from Prague, May 24, the Embassy reported increased police brutality against Charter 77 members, either as a new hardening of the GOC line on dissidence, or as a result of the visit Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was scheduled to make to Prague. (National Archives, RG 59, Central Foreign Policy File, D780219–0272)↩