Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 31 – When the law
imposing administrative punishments on those who show a lack of respect for the
powers that be was adopted exactly a year ago, many assumed that it was first
and foremost about punishing those who criticized in any way Vladimir Putin
online. So it has turned out to be, according to Agora lawyer Stanislaw
Seleznev.
According to his count, there have
been 100 such cases brought that have led to 51 sentences involving fines totaling
1.6 million rubles (20,000 US dollars). Of these, three out of four concerned
instances where individuals or groups had criticized the Kremlin leader and
they were assessed 75 percent of the fines (ehorussia.com/new/node/20529).
Most cases originated outside of
Moscow, Seleznev says. Among the 44 regions were there have been such charges, the
most were in Arkhangelsk oblast with eight, Kemerovo Oblast with seven, and
Vologda and Saratov Oblasts with six each. Fifty-five of the cases involved
posts on VKontakte, with much smaller numbers from Odnoklassniki,
Facebook, and Instagram.
The law, which provides no clear
definition of what constitutes a display of a lack of respect was also applied
to people who commented on other lower-ranking officials. In some cases, the
Agora lawyer said, the courts did not even specify whom those charged had
offended but fined them anyway.
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