The Commercial Appeal

Risks rise for Russian protesters

Countering official news brings prison sentences

- Anna Nemtsova

LONDON – Oleg Kashintsev, a retired police officer in Russia, may spend eight years in prison. His crime? Spreading fake news, according to Russian authoritie­s.

Olesya Krivtsova, 19, is considered a terrorist and extremist, the equivalent of a member of the Islamic State or the Taliban. She is facing 10 years in prison. Her crime? She posted a photo of the explosion on the bridge to the occupied Crimean Peninsula, according to Russian news agency TASS.

Everyday Russians, like Kashintsev and Krivtsova, who try to protest the war in Ukraine face the specter of year’s in “Putin’s prisons.” Still, as the oneyear anniversar­y of the war in Ukraine passes, the protests from Russians continue, despite the penalties.

Russia’s leading human rights defenders are alarmed.

“People get detained for posts on social media or even for bringing flowers to the victims of bombings in Ukraine. These political repression­s remind us of the Soviet-era mass arrests,” activist Svetlana Gannushkin­a said.

A week after the war began last year, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law that makes sharing “fake news” a crime. Russia defines fake news as any informatio­n about the war that is different from what the Ministry of Defense – the definitive source – explains in news releases.

More than 6,000 Russians have been charged with administra­tive violations, and 520 Russians have been sentenced to prison, sometimes facing years behind bars, according to Political Prisoners Support, an independen­t group monitoring the Kremlin’s crackdown over the past year.

Although Russia had previously passed fake-news laws, last year’s version was far more aggressive. A 2019 law, for instance, carried a 15-day jail sentence for “unreliable” informatio­n. Now, critics face up to 15 years in prison.

‘They can come for you’

Human rights defenders are alarmed at how little protesters have to do to receive harsh consequenc­es.

“This is the first time we see people being prosecuted purely for their negative opinion,” said Sergei Davides, the head of Political Prisoners Support.

Prosecutor­s and judges don’t consider any presumptio­n of innocence. The implementa­tion of new laws ensures the only accepted opinion about the war is that of the Russian Ministry of Defense, he said.

“If for some reason you have heard their line, but relied on an independen­t report, they can come for you,” Davides said.

‘We came out every day’

But despite Putin’s law, Russians have not stopped protesting the war.

“We came out every day, walked around Moscow’s central streets, but police had orders of operation ‘Fortress,’ which meant they could grab everybody,” said Ivan Ivashkin, an actor from Moscow now living in exile in London. “And they beat many people violently,

drawing blood.”

Over the past year, the impact of the free-speech crackdown has spread beyond Russia’s major cities, such as Moscow and St. Petersburg, to the most remote corners of the sprawling country. In the Putin era, for the first time, the courts prosecute “purely for an opinion different from the general line published by the Defense Ministry,” Davides said.

Arrested 4,000 miles from Moscow

Journalist Maria Ponomarenk­o was sent to a detention center in the remote region of Altai on charges of discrediti­ng Russian armed forces. Earlier this month, she was sentenced to six years in prison. Addressing the court in Siberia, Ponomarenk­o said that “no totalitari­an regime has ever been as strong as before its collapse.”

Activist Vladislav Nikitenko was arrested in his hometown, more than 4,000 miles from Moscow, for writing to Russian prosecutor­s and demanding an investigat­ion into Putin’s “acts of internatio­nal terrorism.”

He was sentenced to three years in prison for “discrediti­ng the army” by a court in Blagoveshc­hensk, a city on the border with China in Siberia.

“Putin’s been pushing his critics into the kitchens, into the undergroun­d,” said Gannushkin­a, a board member of Moscow’s Sakharov Center, which is devoted to the protection of human rights in Russia.

How many Russians have left?

Thousands of Russian prisoners are being recruited to fight in Ukraine, according to Russia Behind Bars, a nongovernm­ental organizati­on monitoring the lives of Russian convicts.

“The entire country feels like prison to political dissidents,” said Olga Romanova, founder of the prisoners rights group. She said the Kremlin has recruited more than 50,000 criminals since summer, and only about 10,000 have survived.

Ultimately, more than 700,000 Russians left the country shortly after a crackdown was announced in September, according to Forbes.

In October, the interior minister of Kazakhstan, Marat Akhmetzhan­ov, told Russian newspaper Kommersant that at least 200,000 Russian citizens had entered the country.

At least 112,000 Russians had relocated to neighborin­g Georgia by the fall. More than 1.3 million Russians had entered European Union countries since the war began, according to the European Border and Coast Guard Agency.

“Ever since Feb. 24 (2022), Russian authoritie­s have been doing everything to destroy any signs of dissent,” said Tania Lokshina, a Human Rights Watch researcher.

Ilya Prusikin, front man of a popular Russian punk group called Little Big, had to leave the country at the end of January after releasing a song called “Generation Cancellati­on.” It was viewed by 14 million people on Youtube.

The Russian Ministry of Justice designated Prusikin a foreign agent.

“People get seven and more years in prison for calling this war a war,” he said in an email. “Our own country is destroyed by Putin and his men behaving like feudal lords. Not only Ukraine is being destroyed.”

 ?? NATALIA KOLESNIKOV­A/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A green ribbon flutters in subtle defiance in Moscow. Residents are finding small ways to express dissent over the country’s war against Ukraine, and green – the combinatio­n of blue and yellow, the colors of the Ukrainian flag – has become a symbol of that protest.
NATALIA KOLESNIKOV­A/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A green ribbon flutters in subtle defiance in Moscow. Residents are finding small ways to express dissent over the country’s war against Ukraine, and green – the combinatio­n of blue and yellow, the colors of the Ukrainian flag – has become a symbol of that protest.

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