MOSCOW, February 21 (RIA Novosti) – A court in Moscow found eight opposition activists guilty Friday of rioting and using violence against authorities in a 2012 anti-Kremlin rally in a high-profile case that has aroused concerns of increased repression against anti-government groups.
Ahead of the verdict, riot police outside the courtroom dragged away over 100 of the defendants’ supporters in chaotic and rowdy scenes.
Sentencing in the case over the rally, held on Moscow’s Bolotnaya Square on the eve of President Vladimir Putin’s inauguration for a third term, was due later Friday.
Two activists, anarchist Alexandra Dukhanina, 20, and Sergei Krivov of the liberal party PARNAS, 52, face up to six years in prison. Prosecutors have asked for sentences of 5 1/2 years for five other defendants, and five for the remaining one – less than the others because he has a child.
At least 127 people were detained outside the Zamoskvoretsky District Court, according to the OVDInfo.org website, which tracks alleged police abuse. Moscow police earlier said about 50 people had been held for “disturbing the public peace.”
Among those detained outside were two people who were earlier suspects in the same case before they were amnestied at the end of last year, as well as a man taken into custody for waving a Russian flag, according to live video feeds from outside the courtroom.
Between 500 and 1,000 people gathered near the court Friday, chanting “freedom.”
Activists also evoked events in neighboring Ukraine, comparing Russian riot police and plainclothes officers present to Ukraine’s Berkut police squads and “titushki,” thugs allegedly hired by the Ukrainian government to attack protesters.
At least 77 people died in Kiev this week in clashes between police offers and anti-government protesters.
Russian opposition leaders had repeatedly said that the Kremlin would likely make an example of the Moscow activists to send a warning to others, particularly in light of current events in Kiev.
A series of large-scale street protests against Putin’s return to the presidency took place in Moscow and other Russian cities in 2011-2013.
The protests were largely peaceful, with the exception of an event on the central Bolotnaya Square on May 6, 2012, where protest goers and police clashed as the rally got under way.
Police accused leftist leaders of instigating the clashes, while the opposition says the police mishandled and provoked the crowd, possibly deliberately.
About 650 people were briefly detained on Bolotnaya. Twenty-seven faced criminal prosecution, though some were cleared by a presidential amnesty approved last year, before their trials had reached sentencing.
The story was rewritten throughout to include background, more details on Friday's arrests, the number of detainees.
No comments :
Post a Comment