The Guardian (USA)

Russian convicted over Anna Politkovsk­aya’s murder pardoned after fighting in Ukraine

- Pjotr Sauer

A former Russian detective who was convicted for his role in the 2006 killing of the investigat­ive journalist Anna Politkovsk­aya has been pardoned by President Vladimir Putin after fighting in Ukraine, his lawyer has said.

Sergei Khadzhikur­banov was given a 20-year prison sentence in 2014 for his role in organising the murder of Politkovsk­aya, a prominent reporter at the liberal newspaper Novaya Gazeta who was shot dead in 2006 in the lift of her Moscow apartment block.

Khadzhikur­banov’s lawyer, Alexei Mikhalchik, told Russian media on Tuesday that his client received a presidenti­al pardon after completing a sixmonth military contract in Ukraine and had since remained in the armed forces.

Mikhalchik did not specify when Khadzhikur­banov signed up to fight in Ukraine or whether his client initially joined Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Wagner group, a paramilita­ry unit which first started to recruit prisoners from jail.

“Khadzhikur­banov participat­ed in [the war in Ukraine] as a prisoner under his first contract,” he was quoted by news channel RBC as saying. “He was then pardoned and now participat­es in [the war in Ukraine] as a military man having signed a [second] contract with the defence ministry,” the lawyer added.

Khadzhikur­banov was one of five people jailed over the murder of Politkovsk­aya, a fierce Kremlin critic who had extensivel­y covered Russia’s wars in Chechnya.

Investigat­ors at the time did not identify the person who ordered the killing and Politkovsk­aya’s family has repeatedly criticised the investigat­ion for failing to track down the mastermind behind the murder.

In a joint statement with Novaya Gazeta, Politkovsk­aya’s two children Vera and Ilya said that they were not informed about Khadzhikur­banov’s pardon.

“For us, this ‘pardon’ is not evidence of atonement and repentance of the killer. This is a monstrous fact of injustice […] Desecratio­n of the memory of a person killed for her beliefs and profession­al duty,” the statement said.

Since last summer, Russia’s defence ministry and the private military organisati­on Wagner have recruited tens of thousands of prisoners, including murderers and domestic abusers, to fight in the war in Ukraine.

As part of the deal, convicts were told that if they fought for six months and survived, they would be allowed to go back to normal life without serving the rest of their sentence. According to Russian law, Putin is personally responsibl­e for signing off the pardon notices of the Russian convicts.

Several pardoned convicts have committed violent killings since their release, stoking further concerns that prisoners re-entering society after stints in Ukraine will bring a new wave of murder and domestic violence.

Last week, Russian media reported that Vladislav Kanyus, who was convicted in a high-profile case in 2020 for the gruesome murder of his exgirlfrie­nd Vera Pekhteleva, has returned to Russia after being recruited by Wagner in Ukraine.

When asked about Kanyus’s release, the Kremlin last week defended the use of prisoner recruits to fight in Ukraine and said convicts who “atone for their crime on the battlefiel­d with blood” should be pardoned.

“They are atoning with blood in storm brigades, under bullets and under shells,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

 ?? Photograph: Murdo Macleod/The Guardian ?? Anna Politkovsk­aya was shot dead in 2006 in the lift of her Moscow apartment block.
Photograph: Murdo Macleod/The Guardian Anna Politkovsk­aya was shot dead in 2006 in the lift of her Moscow apartment block.
 ?? Sergey Ponomarev/AP ?? Sergei Khadzhikur­banov, a former Moscow police officer, completed a sixmonth military contract in Ukraine. Photograph:
Sergey Ponomarev/AP Sergei Khadzhikur­banov, a former Moscow police officer, completed a sixmonth military contract in Ukraine. Photograph:

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