The Guardian (USA)

Pussy Riot and Chilean group join forces against state repression

- Charis McGowan in Santiago

Government­s around the world are using the coronaviru­s as an excuse to step up repression and push back civil liberties, warns a new song by Pussy Riot, released alongside a new manifesto written with the Chilean feminist collective Lastesis.

The Russian activists and the Chilean group – whose song A Rapist In Your Path became a viral feminist anthem in 2019 – released the manifesto against police violence and state repression on Friday.

“While we are confined, government­s are intensifyi­ng the persecutio­n of social struggles, tearing apart our rights, our freedoms,” it reads.

The song – whose title 1312 is a numerical representa­tion of the anti-police acronym ACAB (All Cops Are Bastards) – strays into numetal dissonance, with singer Nadya Tolokonnik­ova howling “ACAB try to catch me wow!”.

The song refers to the wave of popular protest which erupted in Chile last year – and the violent police response which left thousands injured, including 445 people blinded by anti-riot weapons, and at least 30 dead.

The five-month uprising was abruptly halted by the pandemic, but the groups’ manifesto warns that state repression in Chile and beyond has only grown worse as police and military enforce lockdowns.

“Police act dangerousl­y,” said Tolokonnik­ova, the Pussy Riot cofounder who was imprisoned for 18 months in 2012 for staging a protest in the Russian Orthodox cathedral in Moscow. She has also been beaten by Russian police during protests.

“Instead of protecting people and investigat­ing real crimes like rape or domestic violence, police persecute activists and protect those with power,” she added.

Chile remains under strict lockdown, with obligatory quarantine­s enforced by police and army patrols.

“It’s like living in an atmosphere of war,” said Lea Cáceres, a member of Lastesis alongside Dafne Valdés, Paula

Cometa and Sibila Sotomayor. “We have armed police and military on the street simply to generate fear. They don’t help the community.”

The manifesto echoes concerns raised in a recent Amnesty Internatio­nal report condemning government­s across the Americas for subjecting civilians to “excessive” repression “and obliging them to obey quarantine­s in “inhuman conditions”.

In Russia, authoritie­s have been accused of opportunis­tically using the lockdown to monitor civilians using facial recognitio­n, and infringe on civil liberties.

“The Russian government is using coronaviru­s as a smokescree­n to implement more laws to control citizens,” said Tolokonnik­ova, adding that she has “a lot in common” with Latin American activism. “We’re both fighting the oppressive system.”

The manifesto calls on civilians to set the institutio­ns of the state on fire – “in a figurative sense”, clarified Valdés. “We need to rebuild from zero,” she said. 

Tolokonnik­ova approached Lastesis after witnessing the impact of A Rapist In Your Path, whose message about structural misogyny resonated around

the world and was picked up by activists in more than 50 countries.

“I was amazed by their power to connect activists all around the world,” said Tolokonnik­ova, adding that she was “starstruck” when she first got in touch with the Chilean quartet. 

The two groups plan to continue collaborat­ing on politicall­y charged performanc­es once the pandemic subsides.  “Like Pussy Riot, Lastesis don’t see art as a mirror, they see it as a hammer to shape the world,” said Tolokonnik­ova.

“With global solidarity, we can achieve really big changes.”

 ??  ?? Nadia Tolokonnik­ova, of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot, performs during the Vive Latino music festival in Mexico City, in 2018. Photograph: Christian Palma/AP
Nadia Tolokonnik­ova, of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot, performs during the Vive Latino music festival in Mexico City, in 2018. Photograph: Christian Palma/AP

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