Bangkok Post

PUSSY RIOT SLAMS PUTIN RE-ELECTION AT MEXICO SHOW

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The Russian punk protest group Pussy Riot — whose members served time in prison camps after criticisin­g the Moscow government — is rejecting President Vladimir Putin’s re-election.

“Today, Vladimir Putin won Russian elections for the fourth time, so we created this f**king music band because we didn’t want him to be our president, but then, literally, it became an internatio­nal movement,” Nadezhda Tolokonnik­ova, the group’s frontwoman, said over the weekend during a show at a Mexican music festival.

“And actually, anybody can be a Pussy Riot, all of you can be a Pussy Riot.”

Shortly before taking to the stage at the Vive Latino festival, the group also launched their latest single, Elections.

The group also slammed the wave of violence against women gripping Mexico, where, according to the UN, more than seven women are killed every day.

A loose feminist collective, Pussy Riot came onto the scene in 2012, the same year as the last Russian presidenti­al election. Members of the group were arrested during a performanc­e of their “punk prayer” openly criticisin­g Putin at Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior. The sentencing of Tolokonnik­ova, Masha Alyokhina and Yekaterina Samutsevic­h to two years in prison camps for “hooliganis­m” and “inciting religious hatred” provoked outrage in the West.

Samutsevic­h received a suspended sentence, while Alyokhina and Tolokonnik­ova spent 22 months in jail before being let out under a general amnesty on the eve of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

 ??  ?? Russian punk band Pussy Riot performs during the Vive Latino music festival in Mexico City.
Russian punk band Pussy Riot performs during the Vive Latino music festival in Mexico City.

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