Paul Goble
Staunton, February 21 – The
sentencing of Ekaterina Vologzheninova for reposting materials against Russian
aggression in Ukraine to 320 hours of labor is not only horrific given the
reason for her prosecution and the way it was carried out but underscores five
lessons the Kremlin is sending by its actions, according to Kseniya Kirillova.
In a commentary for Kasparov.ru, the
US-based Russian writer lists them, although she suggests there are many other important
lessons to be drawn from the Ekaterinburg trial (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=56C830066A124). The
most important lessons the trial offers are some the authorities may like and
some they may very much fear:
1. “Criticism of the
authorities in Russia is officially a crime.”
In the original list of charges, the authorities
noted that Vologzheninova had displayed “a negative attitude ‘to the
authorities in Russia, to the political course of contemporary Russia and to
the president of Russia as the first person and embodiment of power in Russia.’”
Kirillova does not that “the court excluded the accusations concerning Vladimir
Putin personally from its sentence.”
2. “Promoting
dialogue, the exchange of opinions, is a no less terrible crime.” Seeking
to convince others of your own point of view is a crime, unless your point of
view is the same as that of the regime.
3. “All citizens of
Russia or at a minimum Muscovites are in the opinion of the FSB occupiers.” The
logic of the FSB specialist on the language of Vologzheninova’s posts leads one
to conclude that in the opinion of the authorities, the Russian-language
speakers of the DNR and LNR are a separate nation and that they are occupiers
are “in the eyes of law enforcement synonyms.”
4. “The entire
proceeding shows that the authorities are entirely supporting and defending
militants and terrorists” in the Donbas
and will do whatever it takes to defend them from criticism as well as
promoting their aims.
5.
“The case shows that one can forget about justice from the
Russian criminal justice system.”
Despite these
messages from the authorities, this case, Kirillova points out, provided some
good news about Russia by showing “the unprecedented courage of the most
ordinary Russians who have taken the risk of challenging the repressive system
and openly speaking out against war directly in the halls of a court.”
“In truth,” she
continues, that does more than could be achieved by any Peace March or meeting
or picketing. It shows that “besides the
‘official’ Russia, which is false, harsh and illegal, there exist another
Russia; sincere, noble and prepared for sacrifice.” The possibility that Russia
will triumph is suggested by the heroism of Vologzheninova and her supporters.
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