The Palm Beach Post

Courts jail Putin critic, figure in fatal cafe blast

- Jim Heintz

TALLINN, Estonia – A Russian court on Thursday sentenced a woman to 27 years in prison for a cafe blast that killed a prominent pro-war blogger after he was given a bust of himself that later exploded.

In a separate proceeding, a Moscow court convicted a former leader of separatist rebels in Ukraine who called President Vladimir Putin a coward of extremism and sentenced him to four years.

Darya Trepova, 26, was convicted by a court in St. Petersburg of carrying out a terrorist attack, illegal traffickin­g of explosive devices and forging documents in the April 2 blast at the cafe in which Vladlen Tatarsky was killed and 52 others were injured.

Tatarsky, 40, was an ardent supporter of the Kremlin’s military action in Ukraine and filed regular reports on the fighting from the front lines.

Trepova was seen on video presenting Tatarsky with the bust moments before the blast at the riverside cafe in the heart of Russia’s second-largest city where he was leading a discussion.

She insisted that she didn’t know the bust contained a bomb. Russian authoritie­s have blamed Ukrainian intelligen­ce agencies for orchestrat­ing the bombing. Authoritie­s in Kyiv have not directly responded to the accusation.

The court also convicted Trepova’s acquaintan­ce Dmitry Kasintsev of concealing a grave crime for sheltering her after the blast and sentenced him to 21 months in prison.

The Moscow court imposed a fouryear sentence on Igor Girkin, who used the surname alias of Strelkov (shooter), was the most prominent leader of Russian-backed separatist fighters in Ukraine’s Donetsk region in 2014, when rebellion arose after the ouster of Ukraine’s Russia-allied president.

He briefly became the self-declared separatist government’s defense minister but left the post in August 2014 after rebel forces shot down a Malaysian passenger airliner over Donetsk, killing all 298 people aboard. He was convicted in absentia of murder in the Netherland­s, where the flight had originated, for his role.

He returned to Russia and became a nationalis­t commentato­r and activist. He supported launching Russia’s war in Ukraine but sharply criticized authoritie­s for being inept and indecisive in carrying out the fight.

Girkin called Putin a “nonentity” and a person of “cowardly mediocrity.” He was arrested in July on extremism charges and remained in custody since then.

His conviction reflects the high sensitivit­y of Russian authoritie­s to criticism and opposition. After Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, that sensitivit­y intensifie­d sharply, with the passage of laws criminaliz­ing statements and news reports that allegedly discredit the Russian military.

Two protesters calling for Girkin to be freed were detained by police outside the court building, Russian news agencies said.

Girkin’s sentence was considerab­ly less harsh than those handed to some figures who have denounced the war, notably the 25-year sentence imposed on opposition figure Vladimir KaraMurza.

 ?? DMITRI LOVETSKY/AP ?? Darya Trepova, a suspect in a bombing that killed a Russian military blogger, talks with her lawyer Thursday during a court hearing in St. Petersburg, Russia.
DMITRI LOVETSKY/AP Darya Trepova, a suspect in a bombing that killed a Russian military blogger, talks with her lawyer Thursday during a court hearing in St. Petersburg, Russia.

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