Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 4 – A district court
in Arkhangelsk fined Pomor activist Ivan Moseyev 100,000 rubles (3,300 US
dollars) for extremism because of an insult to the dignity of the Russian people
he posted online, but only after that court had earlier dropped the more serious
charge against him of espionage on behalf of Norway.
On Friday, the October District
Court of Arkhangelsk announced its verdict and imposed this fine on Ivan
Moseyev, the director of the Pomor Institute for Indigenous and Numerically
Small Peoples at the Arctic Federal University, according to a report in the “Ekho
Russkogo Severa” newspaper (echosevera.ru/news/2013/03/01/5898.html).
The
court ruled that Moseyev, despite his denials, had on April 1, 2012, had used
his personal computer to post online comments signed with the pseudonym “Pomor”
comments that were insulting to the dignity of members of the Russian ethnic
group and ones that he knew would thus be seen by a large number of Russian
citizens.
The
case against Moseyev was initiative by the Arkhangelsk office of the FSB and
attracted widespread attention in northwestern Russia and in Europe because the
Russian authorities had first charged Moseyev with espionage. That charge was later dropped when key
witnesses disavowed the testimony they had earlier made.
Moseyev’s
lawyers will certainly appeal the case, and so this verdict is far from the end
of the Pomor expert activist’s legal travails. But in many respects, it
constitutes a victory for him, one possible only because of the outrage that
Norwegian and other Scandinavian governments and human rights groups expressed.
And
it is likely that this judicial finding will spark another outburst of Russian
commentary on Moseyev and the Pomors, a small northern community whose members
see as a distinct nationality but which most Russian writers say is simply a
part of the Russian nation which some in the country and abroad want to break
off from that ethnos.
Consequently,
Moseyev’s case is likely to continue to resonate precisely because his work
highlights three things that most Russian nationalists and many in the central
government are very reluctant to acknowledge. First, the Russian nation is far
less coherent than many of them want to assume and may continue to fragment.
Second,
members of these small groups are increasingly active and are using the
Internet to promote their cause. And
third and most important perhaps, these groups, especially those located near the
border of the Russian Federation, can attract international support. Moscow
must thus balance its interest in repressing them with a concern about its own
reputation.
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