Los Angeles Times

Activist to get mental treatment

A Russian court sentences protester to ‘a psychiatri­c asylum of a closed type’ for an undefined period.

- By Sergei L. Loiko sergei.loiko@latimes.com

MOSCOW — In a throwback to the days of the Soviet Union, a Russian court Tuesday ordered an opposition activist to be sent to a mental institutio­n for compulsory treatment.

Mikhail Kosenko, 38, who spent more than a year in preliminar­y detention on charges of taking part in a violent demonstrat­ion, was ordered by the Zamoskvore­tsky district court in Moscow to undergo mental treatment at a prison-like mental institutio­n for an undefined period.

Kosenko, one of a group of 28 opposition activists facing similar charges, was arrested shortly after an opposition rally near the Kremlin on May 6, 2012, the day before Vladimir Putin was inaugurate­d for his third term as president.

Thousands of demonstrat­ors were protesting what they believed was electoral fraud in the presidenti­al vote. The rally ended with clashes between demonstrat­ors and police, and more than 400 people were detained.

The Kremlin accused its political opposition of organizing and inciting the violence. The opposition blamed the Kremlin and called the charges against its activists false and politicall­y motivated.

Kosenko’s trial was the third involving activists arrested at the rally. In the previous trials, held this year, two activists pleaded guilty and received sentences of 41⁄ years and 21⁄ years in

2 2 prison. The charges carried a maximum penalty of 10 years.

Kosenko, who acknowledg­ed suffering from a minor mental illness, was sent to Moscow’s Serbsky mental clinic, where he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophre­nia and found to be a danger to himself and others. The diagnosis was immediatel­y contested by a group of independen­t psychiatri­sts.

On Oct. 2, in his last courtroom remarks, Kosenko asked the judge to consider him sane.

Kosenko was in custody when his mother died Sept. 5, but Judge Lyudmila Moskalenko refused to allow him to attend the funeral, arguing that he “could again indulge in criminal activities or flee the trial.”

On Tuesday, Moskalenko found Kosenko guilty of taking part in mass disorders and attacking police, and ordered “compulsory treatment in a psychiatri­c asylum of a closed type.”

Rights activists said the trial and sentencing were reminiscen­t of the Soviet era, when psychiatry was used as a political tool and dissidents were sent to prison-like mental institutio­ns where conditions could be harsher than in the Soviet gulag.

“This is a monstrous ruling that sends Russia back in time to the dark period when a political protest was considered a mental disease,” Svetlana Gannushkin­a, a board member of Memorial, a Moscow-based rights group, said in an in- terview. “This ruling sends a message to the world that from now on the Kremlin critics could be treated for their obvious mental deviations.”

Gleb Pavlovsky, a former Kremlin advisor, argued that the Putin administra­tion wanted to soften the sentencing of Kosenko by sending him to a mental institutio­n instead of prison.

“Of course it is a political trial, and this verdict doesn’t make sense in terms of law,” Pavlovsky, head of the Foundation for Effective Politics, a Moscow-based think tank, said in an interview. “But at this stage we should see this verdict as a softer punishment, given Kosenko’s mental condition.”

He said it was premature to interpret it as “symboliz- ing a campaign similar to the punitive psychiatry used against Soviet dissidents.”

Lyudmila Alexeyeva, a veteran rights activist and prominent Soviet dissident who attended the court session Tuesday, cried after the verdict was announced.

“Butchers! Butchers!” she yelled.

About 100 supporters of Kosenko gathered in front of the courthouse. They met news of the verdict with shouts of “Shame!” Some were arrested by riot police.

The 25 remaining protesters charged with taking part in the 2012 demonstrat­ion are expected to be tried this year.

Kosenko will remain in custody pending appeal.

 ?? Dmitry Lovetsky Associated Press ?? MIKHAIL KOSENKO, 38, in court in Moscow, has acknowledg­ed suffering from a minor mental illness. He was found guilty of taking part in mass disorders and attacking police during a 2012 anti-Putin demonstrat­ion.
Dmitry Lovetsky Associated Press MIKHAIL KOSENKO, 38, in court in Moscow, has acknowledg­ed suffering from a minor mental illness. He was found guilty of taking part in mass disorders and attacking police during a 2012 anti-Putin demonstrat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States