Las Vegas Review-Journal

Russian guilty in absentia, is given 9 years

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MOSCOW — A Moscow court on Monday sentenced a popular cookbook author and blogger to nine years in prison after convicting her in absentia of spreading false informatio­n about the country’s military. The trial was part of the Kremlin’s sweeping, monthslong crackdown on dissent.

The charges against Veronika Belotserko­vskaya, who lives abroad, were brought over her Instagram posts that the authoritie­s alleged contained “deliberate­ly false informatio­n about the use of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation to destroy cities and the civilian population of Ukraine, including children.”

Belotserko­vskaya, whose Instagram profile says she was born in Odesa, a city in southern Ukraine, responded to the news of the sentencing by writing that she is, “on one hand, perplexed, and on the other hand, of course, proud.”

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee announced launching a case against Belotserko­vskaya on March 16, 2022, several weeks after Moscow’s troops rolled into Ukraine. It was the first publicly known case under a new law adopted earlier that month that penalized informatio­n seen as disparagin­g to the Russian military.

The Russian authoritie­s issued an arrest order for the blogger in absentia, put her on a wanted list and seized 153 million rubles (roughly $2.2 million U.S.) worth of her assets.

She was also declared a “foreign agent,” a designatio­n that implies additional government scrutiny and carries strong pejorative connotatio­ns aimed at discrediti­ng the recepient.

Belotserko­vskaya by far has been handed the longest prison sentence under the new law.

Last week, a Moscow court sentenced Alexander Nevzorov, a television journalist and former lawmaker, in absentia to eight years in prison on the same charges.

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