Kuwait Times

Demonstrat­ors, police clash in rare riot over Russian jailed activist

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MOSCOW: Protesters and riot police were injured Wednesday when clashes erupted in a small town in Russia’s central Bashkortos­tan after an activist was sentenced to four years in prison. Street protests are a rarity in Russia, which has clamped down on dissent since launching its military offensive in Ukraine and has strict anti-demonstrat­ion laws.

Crowds of men in the town of Baymak fought with riot police in temperatur­es hovering around -20 Celsius (-4 Fahrenheit), social media footage showed. Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee said both police and protestors sustained injuries in the confrontat­ion.

“During the mass riots, which were accompanie­d by violence including the use of objects as weapons, several people were injured, including members of law enforcemen­t,” it said in a statement on Wednesday.

The independen­t OVD-Info rights group, which monitors protests across Russia, said police used tear gas to disperse the demonstrat­ors and that dozens had been detained. The Investigat­ive Committee said it had opened criminal cases into “mass rioting” — a crime that carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison—and for violence against a public officer, punishable by up to five years in prison.

‘Fought for justice’

The protests were sparked after a court in the town of around 17,000 people sentenced an eco-activist and campaigner for the protection of the Bashkir language — Fail Alsynov — to four years in prison for “inciting hatred”. The ruling was issued behind closed doors.

Alsynov was accused of making a racist comment in a speech to a village council meeting against gold digging. He insists his words were mistransla­ted from the Bashkir language. The SOTA opposition Telegram channel showed a video of a handcuffed Alsynov still inside the courtroom after the verdict on Wednesday, protesting his innocence. “I do not admit my guilt,” Alsynov said, vowing to appeal the ruling. “I always fought for justice, for my nation, for my republic.”

According to SOTA, the clashes started after protesters blocked the court building in a bid to try to stop Alsynov from being taken away. Videos shared on social media showed men washing their eyes with water after reports police used tear gas in the freezing temperatur­es outside. Anticipati­ng a public response, police had on the eve of the verdict warned people not to take part in “illegal public gatherings”.

‘Mass riots’

Alsynov’s case had already sparked protests of several hundred people in Baymak earlier this week. The head of the local interior ministry, Rafail Divayev, urged demonstrat­ors to back down on Wednesday. “Mass riots threaten our country’s national security, therefore the punishment under this article is quite serious,” the state-run RIA Novosti news agency quoted him as saying. “I advise you to come to your senses and not ruin your life.”

The protests are some of the country’s biggest demonstrat­ions since Russia sent troops into Ukraine and escalated a decade-long crackdown on opposition to the Kremlin. Some of the protesters called for the dismissal of the local governor, Radiy Khabirov, who had accused Alsynov of using racist language.

In the speech that resulted in the charges, Alsynov had used two words in Bashkir that were translated into Russian as “black people”. In Russia, the phrase is often used to pejorative­ly describe people from Central Asia and the Caucasus. Alsynov said he was referring to poor people.

The activist was last year fined for criticizin­g Moscow’s offensive in Ukraine online, saying it was not in Bashkortos­tan’s interests. According to local media, Alsynov called Russia’s mobilizati­on drive a “genocide of the Bashkir people” and said Moscow’s offensive “was not our war”. Multiple independen­t analyses have shown a disproport­ionately high number of military call-ups and fatalities among Russia’s minority national groups, including from Bashkortos­tan.

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