Greenwich Time

Putin’s dissent crackdown defines his long rule

- By Dasha Litvinova

TALLINN, Estonia — When charismati­c opposition leader Boris Nemtsov was gunned down on a bridge near the Kremlin in February 2015, more than 50,000 Muscovites expressed their shock and outrage the next day at the brazen assassinat­ion. Police stood aside as they rallied and chanted anti-government slogans.

Nine years later, stunned and angry Russians streamed into the streets on the night of Feb. 16, when they heard that popular opposition politician Alexei Navalny had died in prison. But this time, those laying flowers at i mpromptu memorials in major cities were met by riot police, who arrested and dragged hundreds of them away.

In those intervenin­g years, Vladimir Putin's Russia evolved from a country that tolerated some dissent to one that ruthlessly suppresses it. Arrests, trials and long prison terms — once rare — are commonplac­e, especially after Moscow invaded Ukraine.

Alongside its political opponents, the Kremlin now also targets rights groups, independen­t media and other members of civil-society organizati­ons, LGBTQ+ activists and certain religious affiliatio­ns.

“Russia is no longer an authoritar­ian state -— it is a totalitari­an state,” said Oleg Orlov, co-chair of Memorial, the Russian human rights group focused on political repression. “All these repression­s are aimed at suppressin­g any independen­t expression about Russia's political system, about the actions of the authoritie­s, or any independen­t civil activists.”

A month after making that comment to The Associated Press, the 70-year-old Orlov became one of his group's own statistics: He was handcuffed and hauled out of a courtroom after being convicted of criticizin­g the military over Ukraine and sentenced to 2½ years in prison.

Memorial estimates there are nearly 680 political prisoners in Russia. Another group, OVDInfo, said in November that 1,141 people are behind bars on politicall­y motivated charges, with over 400 others receiving other punishment and nearly 300 more under investigat­ion.

The USSR vanishes but repression returns

There was a time after the collapse of the Soviet Union when it seemed Russia had turned a page and widespread repression was a thing of the past, said Orlov, a human rights advocate since the 1980s.

While there were isolated cases in the 1990s under President Boris Yeltsin, Orlov said major crackdowns began slowly after Putin came to power in 2000.

Exiled oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, who spent 10 years in prison after challengin­g Putin, told AP in a recent interview the Kremlin began stifling dissent even before his 2003 arrest. It purged independen­t TV channel NTV and went after other defiant oligarchs like Vladimir Gusinsky or Boris Berezovsky.

Asked if he thought back then whether the crackdown would reach today's scale of hundreds of political prisoners and prosecutio­ns, Khodorkovs­ky said: “I rather thought he (Putin) would snap earlier.”

When Nadya Tolokonnik­ova and her fellow members of Pussy Riot were arrested in 2012 for performing an anti-Putin song ina main Orthodox cathedral in Moscow, their two-year prison sentence came as a shock, she recalled in an interview.

“Back then, it seemed an incredibly (long prison) term .I couldn't even imagine that I

would ever get out,” she said.

A rising intoleranc­e for dissent

When Putin regained the presidency in 2012 after evading term limits by serving four years as prime minister, he was greeted by mass protests. He saw these as Western-inspired and wanted to nip them in the bud, said Tatiana Stanovaya of Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center.

Many were arrested, and over a dozen received up to four years in prison after those protests. But mostly, Stanovaya said, authoritie­s were “creating conditions in which the opposition could not thrive,” rather than dismantlin­g it.

A flurry of laws followed that tightened regulation­s on protests, gave broad powers to authoritie­s to block websites and surveil users online. They slapped the restrictiv­e label of “foreign agent” on groups to weed out what the Kremlin saw as harmful outside influence fueling dissent.

Navalny in 2013-14 was convicted twice of embezzleme­nt and fraud, but received suspended sentences. His brother was imprisoned in what was seen as a move to pressure the opposition leader.

Moscow's annexation of Crimea in 2014 from Ukraine created a surge of patriotism and boosted Putin's popularity, emboldenin­g the Kremlin. Authoritie­s

restricted foreignfun­ded nongovernm­ental organizati­ons and rights groups, outlawing some as “undesirabl­e,” and targeted online critics with prosecutio­ns, fines and occasional­ly jail.

In the meantime, the tolerance for protests grew thinner. Demonstrat­ions spearheade­d by Navalny in 2016-17 brought hundreds of arrests; mass rallies in summer 2019 saw another handful of demonstrat­ors convicted and imprisoned.

The Kremlin used the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 as an excuse to ban protests. To this day, authoritie­s often refuse to allow rallies, citing “coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.”

After Navalny's poisoning, recuperati­on in Germany and arrest upon his return to Russia in 2021, repression­s intensifie­d. His entire political infrastruc­ture was outlawed as extremist, exposing his allies and supporters to prosecutio­n.

Open Russia, an opposition group backed from abroad by Khodorkovs­ky, also had to shut down, and its leader, Andrei Pivovarov, was arrested.

Orlov's group Memorial was shut down by the Supreme Court in 2021, the year before it won the Nobel Peace Prize as the hopeful symbol of a postSoviet Russia. He recalled the disbelief about the court's ruling.

“We couldn't imagine all these next stages of the spiral, that the war would erupt, and all those laws about discrediti­ng the army will be adopted,” he said.

War and repressive new laws

With the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russia enacted those repressive new laws that stifled any anti-war protests and criticism of the military. The number of arrests, criminal cases and trials mushroomed.

Charges varied — from donating money to rights groups helping Ukraine to involvemen­t with Navalny's now “extremist” group.

Kremlin critics were imprisoned, and their prominence didn't seem to matter. Navalny eventually got 19 years, while another opposition foe, Vladimir Kara-Murza, got the harshest sentence of 25 years for treason.

Among those also swept up: a St. Petersburg artist who got seven years for replacing supermarke­t price tags with antiwar slogans; two Moscow poets who got five and seven years over reciting verses in public, one of which mentioned Ukraine; and a 72-year-old woman who got 5½ years for two social media posts against the war.

Activists say prison sentences have gotten longer, compared with those before the war. Increasing­ly, authoritie­s have appealed conviction­s that resulted in lighter punishment. In Orlov's case, prosecutor­s sought a retrial of his earlier conviction that initially drew only a fine; he later was sentenced to prison.

Another trend is an increase in trials in absentia, said Damir Gainutdino­v, head of the Net Freedoms rights group. It counted 243 criminal cases on charges of “spreading false informatio­n” about the military, and 88 of them were against people outside Russia — including 20 who were convicted in absentia.

Independen­t news sites were largely blocked. Many moved their newsrooms abroad, like the independen­t TV channel Dozhd or Novaya Gazeta, with their work available to Russians via VPNs.

At the sam eti me, the Kremlin expanded a decade-long crackdown against Russia's LGBTQ+ community in what officials said was a fight for “traditiona­l values” espoused by the Russian Orthodox Church in the face of the West's “degrading” influence. Last year, courts declared the LGBTQ+ “movement” extremist and banned gender transition­ing.

Pressure on religious groups continued, too, with hundreds of Jehovah's Witnesses being prosecuted across Russia since 2017, when the denominati­on was declared extremist.

The system of oppression is designed “to keep people in fear,” said Nikolay Petrov, visiting researcher at the German Institute for Internatio­nal and Security Affairs.

It doesn't always work. Last week, thousands of people defied scores of riot police to mourn Navalny at his funeral in southeaste­rn Moscow, chanting “No to war!” and “Russia without Putin!” — slogans that normally would result in arrests.

This time, police uncharacte­ristically did not interfere.

 ?? Valeriy Sharifulin/Associated Press ?? Russian PresidentV­ladimir Putin holds a meeting on the developmen­t of the Russia’s South, as well as the Azov Sea region, via videoconfe­rence at the Bocharov Ruchei residence in Sochi, Russia, on Wednesday.
Valeriy Sharifulin/Associated Press Russian PresidentV­ladimir Putin holds a meeting on the developmen­t of the Russia’s South, as well as the Azov Sea region, via videoconfe­rence at the Bocharov Ruchei residence in Sochi, Russia, on Wednesday.

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