Bitter Blow to Free Speech in Russia: Punk Rock Band Pussy Riot Convicted

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http://blog.amnestyusa.org/europe/bitter-blow-to-free-speech-in-russia-pussy-riot-convicted/

A Russian court’s decision today to sentence members of the punk rock protest band Pussy Riot to 2 years imprisonment in a penal colony is a bitter blow for freedom of expression in Russia – and it sends a dangerous message throughout the world (take action here).

Three members of the all-female group were outrageously charged with “hooliganism on grounds of religious hatred” after they gave a politically charged and impromptu performance – a peaceful performance – poking fun at President Putin at a cathedral in February.

Say what you will about Pussy Riot: this may not be your kind of music. Some people find their shows offensive.

But it doesn’t change the facts: freedom of speech is a human right, and it’s vital to a free and just society.

These young women will be jailed for 2 years starting from the beginning of their detention in March 2012 and kept from their families, including small children, all because of a peaceful protest song that lasted less than a minute.
Maria Alekhina (Masha), Ekaterina Samutsevich (Katia) and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova (Nadia) are prisoners of conscience – imprisoned solely for the peaceful expression of their beliefs –and should be released immediately.

In the shrinking space for freedom of expression in Russia, the arrest and trial of these women is an attempt by the Russian authorities not only to silence their voices but also to give a clear warning to any others who would dare to criticize the government.

But we won’t be silenced!

Thanks to more than one hundred thousand of you who joined us in speaking out, this international support has done something very important – it shined a bright light on a real injustice, it helped Masha, Katia and Nadia in very difficult times, and it demonstrated to Russian authorities that the world is watching. When Amnesty International sat down with the officials of the Russian Embassy in Washington, DC, it was clear they were feeling the pressure.

It has also galvanized Russians who have never before been politically active. This quote from Maria Sereda, a colleague of mine on the ground in Moscow, called this the most broad and heated civic discussion Russia has seen in the past 10-15 years:

“This case really made my country think and talk about religion and state, freedom of expression, tolerance, law enforcement system, right to fair trial. And what’s especially important, for the first time in many years people in Russia could actually see what global solidarity is about… The whole world was supporting our girls and everybody could see it.”

A 2-year sentence is unacceptable – and we will keep fighting until Pussy Riot is free.

Masha, Katia and Nadia might be imprisoned for now, but their courage and their spirit remain undaunted. In Masha’s own words:

“Because all you can deprive me of is “so-called” freedom. This is the only kind that exists in Russia. But nobody can take away my inner freedom. It lives in the word, it will go on living thanks to openness [glasnost], when this will be read and heard by thousands of people. This freedom goes on living with every person who is not indifferent, who hears us in this country.”

Let’s make sure they keep hearing us. Send your message to Russian authorities now and tell them to Free Pussy Riot!
 
There's this picture on the net: http://nsa30.casimages.com/img/2012/08/19//120819013237944617.jpg

Which claim: "OTPOR logo, a group created and used by the CIA in Serbia to destabilizing Slobodan Milosevic".
 

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I hope here read Israel Shamir's articles
Pussy Riot - Secret History By Israel Shamir

During the trial, the defence and the accused did their worst to antagonize the judge by threatening her with the wrath of the United States (sic!) and by defiantly voicing anti-Christian hate speeches. The judge had no choice but to find the accused guilty of hate crime (hooliganism with religious hate as the motive). The prosecution did not charge the accused with a more serious hate crime “with intent to cause religious strife”, though it could probably be made to stick. (It would call for a stiffer sentence; swastika-drawers charged with intent to cause strife receive five years of jail).
Two years’ sentence is quite in line with prevailing European practice. For much milder anti-Jewish hate talk, European countries customarily sentence offenders to two-to-five years of prison for the first offence. The Russians applied hate crime laws to offenders against Christian faith, and this is probably a Russian novelty. The Russians proved that they care for Christ as much as the French care for Auschwitz, and this shocked the Europeans who apparently thought ‘hate laws’ may be applied only to protect Jews and gays. The Western governments call for more freedom for the anti-Christian Russians, while denying it for holocaust revisionists in their midst.
 
Obviously hate has become the euphemism for any emotionally charged disagreement with the officially sanctioned point of view. Any form of dissent against the construct of social engineering is now considered sedition.
Anyone breaking these rules is considered evil and malicious, as well as a criminal. It's not just the authorities who are enforcing these draconian prohibitions either. Discussion boards are a microcosm of social opinion, and even on supposedly open minded boards you'll find enforcement of these "hate laws".
I certainly don't advocate hating anyone, but I still want the right to passionately disagree with anything without being accused of a hate crime.
 

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