19 Aug 2012
Pussy Riot, Modern Russian Women Trapped in Putin’s Time Machine

The Daily Beast
Masha Gessen
17/8/2012

On the eve of the verdict I found myself in New York City, at a reading of some of the Pussy Riot members’ statements, letters, and poems. I was on vacation with my kids, but being away from Moscow, where everyone I know was protesting outside the courthouse, made me feel even more helpless than I did when I was there with them a few days earlier. So I asked if I could help with the reading.

The next day three members of Pussy Riot would be convicted of felony hooliganism and sentenced to two years in penal colonies—for a protest they staged inside Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior on Feb. 21. The cathedral had been virtually empty during the morning hours, and the protest lasted all of 40 seconds before the women were removed by security. But church staff members testified during the trial that they were deeply traumatized by observing the young women in brightly colored dresses and balaclavas lip-sync to a recording of what Pussy Riot calls its punk prayer: “Mother of God, cast Putin out.”

I listened to one of New York’s performance artists read a Pussy Riot manifesto sent from jail. “Patriarch Kirill [head of the Russian Orthodox Church] has repeatedly evangelized on behalf of the figure of Putin—clearly no saint—and continues to urge his parishioners not to participate in protest rallies...We respond to the political activity of the faithful, and counter the patriarch’s efforts to distort the truth on behalf of all believers. And we needed to sing it at the altar, not on the street in front of the temple—that is, in a place where women are strictly forbidden. The fact is, the church is promoting a very conservative worldview that does not fit into such values as freedom of choice, the formation of political identity, gender identity, or sexual identity, critical thinking, multiculturalism, or attention to contemporary culture. It seems to us that the Orthodox Church currently lacks all of these virtues.”

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19 Aug 2012
Free Pussy Riot Comes to the Ace Hotel

The Nation
Lucy McKeon
August 18, 2012

“Freedom is when you forget the name of the tyrant,” wrote Russian feminist punk band Pussy Riot in a letter to President Medvedev in May, quoting the poet Joseph Brodsky, who was expelled from the Soviet Union in 1972 for his own politically engaged art. “Freedom is a unique feeling, which is different for each person,” the letter continues, this time quoting a statement made by President Medvedev himself earlier this year.

These competing notions of freedom aptly demonstrate Pussy Riot’s talent for political art and artful politics, serious dissent enacted through an intense yet playful respect for the freedom of nonconformity.

Amid worldwide protest, Pussy Riot was found guilty of what the judge called “an act of hooliganism, a gross violation of public order showing obvious disrespect for society” and its members were sentenced to two years each. Alisa Obraztsova, a member of Pussy Riot’s legal team, urged Americans not to “cherish an illusion about Russia,” stating that the decision undoubtedly came from Putin or someone close to him. She told Democracy Now!, “There’s no common sense in such legal trials and only the society’s reaction may describe the real situation in Russia.”

Hundreds gathered last night at the Ace Hotel in Midtown Manhattan for a reading of the letters, poetry, lyrics and trial statements of the jailed members of Pussy Riot in anticipation of this morning’s verdict. The audience’s vibe matched the venue’s chic reputation more than a ’90s riot grrrl concert. One bright orange fishnet balaclava—the Pussy Riot signature ski-mask—stood out, worn beneath Ray-Bans. The high-end setting for an activist event prompted one spectator to feel uncomfortable in the dimly lit “fashion versus activism” scene.

 

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03 Aug 2012
Pussy Riot trial 'worse than Soviet era'

Judge refuses to allow 10 defence witnesses as lawyer claims women are being tortured with lack of food and sleep.
Miriam Elder in Moscow for guardian.co.uk

Friday 3 August 2012 14.29 EDT

By the end of the first week of Pussy Riot's trial, everyone in the shabby Moscow courthouse was tired. Guards, armed with submachine guns, grabbed journalists and threw them out of the room at will. The judge, perched in front of a shabby Russian flag, refused to look at the defence. And the police dog – a 100lb black Rottweiler – no longer sat in the corner she had occupied since the start of Russia's trial of the year, but barked and foamed at the mouth as if she were in search of blood. The trial of the three band members, jailed since March after performing a "punk prayer" against Vladimir Putin in Moscow's main cathedral, has been about more than the charges brought against them – formally, hooliganism motivated by religious hatred. In five days of testimony, lawyers and witnesses have laid bare the stark divide that has emerged in Russian society: one deeply conservative and accepting of a state that uses vague laws and bureaucracy to control its citizens, the other liberal bordering on anarchist and beginning to fight against that state with any means it can. The court is dominated by a glass cage that holds the three women – Maria Alyokhina, who has emerged as their unofficial spokeswoman; Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, whose chiselled features have made her the band's unofficial face; and Yekaterina Samutsevich, who sits in a corner of the cage looking every bit the disgruntled punk. After five days' sitting in the cage, some days for 10 hours at a time, the women appear exhausted. Violetta Volkova, one of their lawyers, said they were being tortured – denied food and adequate sleep. After a week of being dismissed and lectured by the judge, she could no longer hide her anger. On Friday, as the judge, Marina Syrova, denied yet another defence objection, Volkova began to shout. Syrova, her glasses forever perched perfectly in the middle of her nose, answered tartly: "You're losing the frames of dignity." "Those frames long haven't existed here," Volkova replied, seething. According to Pussy Riot's lawyers, Russia has revived the Soviet-era tradition of the show trial with its case against the group. "Even in Soviet times, in Stalin's times, the courts were more honest than this one," lawyer Nikolai Polozov shouted in court. Outside, during a rare break, he explained: "This is one of the most shameful trials in modern Russia. In Soviet times, at least they followed some sort of procedure." In one week, Syrova has refused to hear nearly all the objections brought by the defence. One objection claimed that exactly the same spelling errors were found in several witness statements, implying they were falsified. The prosecution was allowed to call all its witnesses, mainly people who were inside the church at the time of the performance or who had viewed a video of it on YouTube. They answered questions like: "What does your Orthodox faith mean to you?", "Was the women's clothing tight?" and "What offended you about their balaclavas?" One witness said she heard music during the band's performance in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, although footage shown in court showed the women singing with no live instruments. The music was added later to their viral video clip, "Virgin Mary, Chase Putin Out!" "What kind of music did you hear?" asked the defence. "It wasn't classical – and it wasn't Orthodox," the witness replied. The defence, meanwhile, tried to call 13 witness, including opposition leader Alexey Navalny and celebrated novelist Lyudmila Ulitskaya. Syrova only allowed them to call three. The prosecution launched the questioning of all its witnesses with the same question: Are you an Orthodox believer? When the defence tried to ask the same question of one of its three witnesses, Syrova shouted: "Question stricken." The defence knows they are fighting a losing battle in a judicial system that is notoriously politicised. But the media battle remains. Pyotr Verzilov, Tolokonnikova's husband, has spent the trial perched in the seat closest to his wife's cage. He tweets furiously, and constantly checks how often his message is spread. On Friday, three men climbed on to a ledge across from the courtroom windows, wearing white, purple and green balaclavas and shouted "Freedom to Pussy Riot!". There have been reports of imitation stunts carried out in other cities in Russia. "At first, after the [anti-Putin] protests started in December, the authorities got scared that they had lost control," Polozov said. "Now they've recovered and have started to react – and the trial against Pussy Riot is the clear first step." Every day as the trial begins, dozens of journalists gather on the stairs outside the court, repeating a tradition launched with the second trial of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the oil tycoon and Putin foe, which was held in the same room. Amid the crush stands Samutsevich's father and Alyokhina's mother, Natalya. "My daughter and I had very different views about politics," Alyokhina said. "But this trial is bringing them closer." Putin said this week that the women should not be judged "too harshly". They face up to seven years in jail if convicted but their lawyers took Putin's comments as a signal that they would not receive the full sentence. A verdict is expected next week.

03 Aug 2012
Putin weighs in on Pussy Riot case

 

AlJazeera
Last Modified: 03 Aug 2012

Russian President Vladimir Putin has said the three women in the band Pussy Riot who performed a "protest prayer" at Russia's main cathedral should not be judged too harshly, raising defence lawyers' hopes that they could escape lengthy jail terms. 

Putin's comments, reported by Russian news agencies during his visit to London on Thursday, suggested the three members of the punk band could escape the maximum seven-year jail term following international criticism of the Kremlin over the case.

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30 Jul 2012
Interview with V.Volkova, one of defense: "Pussy Riot would have been acquitted by the jury"

Mnenia.ru

Kirill Martinov

30/07/2012

 

Independent russian web-site Mnenia.ru publishes an interview with lawyer Violetta Volkova, who is defending Pussy Riot group on trial.

 

Violetta, at the moment the attorneys’ groupdefending Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alyokhina and Ekaterina Samutsevitch dominate both Russian and world press. Out of three attorneys you are the only woman and you seem to be the most kind-hearted of the defenders.

It only seems so. I share my colleagues’ point of view and I’m ready to articulate it when necessary. It’s a rather tough stand considering this exact lawsuit as well as the state of the Russian system of justice in general.

The Russian jurisdiction is purely prosecutive. Moreover, it appears occasionally that in Russia a lawyer can do nothing given that important persons or law enforcement authorities are interested in the result of a trial. Where is the good of working as a lawyer in such a system?

If not for lawyers, large scale executions would start.

But maybe to some extent it’s even better? At least people would see the real face of the law-enforcement system.

Everybody is already looking in the face of our law-enforcement for decades.

In our group we have this term, “murzilka”. It means something else on the Internet, but between us it’s a name of a person who, while appearing for the defendant, helpsthe court to bring an accusation. If you remove us from the practice of law, murzilkas will stay and there won’t be any alternative.

 

Read Full Article: http://mnenia.ru/rubric/politics/pussy-riot-would-have-been-acquitted-by-the-jury/

30 Jul 2012
Pussy Riot: will Vladimir Putin regret taking on Russia's cool women punks?

Pussy Riot aren't just the coolest revolutionaries you're ever likely to meet. They're also the nicest. They're the daughters that any parent would be proud to have. Smart, funny, sensitive, not afraid to stand up for their beliefs. One of them makes a point of telling me how "kindness" is an important part of their ideology. They have also done more to expose the moral bankruptcy of the Putin regime than probably anybody else. No politician, nor journalist, nor opposition figure, nor public personality has created quite this much fuss. Nor sparked such potentially significant debate. The most amazing thing of all, perhaps – more amazing even than calling themselves feminists in the land women's rights forgot – is that they've done it with art.

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29 Jul 2012
Putin goes from the repressive to the absurd

The Guardian Observer
Editorial
28/7/2012

The Kremlin are looking less sure-footed than they once did. Their reaction to Pussy Riot is a case in point
 

Tomorrow, the assault on civil society and the crackdown on dissent instigated by President Vladimir Putin since he began his historic third term in May moves into a different realm. The realm of the absurd. Tomorrow, three young women will stand trial accused of "hooliganism". Their crime? Staging an impromptu performance in February of this year in a Russian Orthodox church in Moscow, singing a religious hymn laced with an anti-Putin lyric.

The women's message was overtly political but the delivery was freighted with lightness and gaiety. The women are part of a 10-strong collective who call themselves Pussy Riot. This, in itself, is surely a challenge to Putin – the most overtly macho leader in world politics. And Pussy Riot don't look like they should be protesters. They dress in bright colours and tights and sport mocking balaclavas. Their protest is not made of slogans and placards, but is crafted from art, dance and performance. Putin and his henchmen know how to deal with the former – the hundreds of thousands who have spilled into the streets in the last eight months – but their handling of the these women is much less assured. It is absurd. It is as though Pussy Riot have managed to ensnare Putin, at great personal cost to themselves, into their world of mischief, invention and subversion.

 

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26 Jul 2012
Punk prayer - A feminist punk band on trial

The Economist
July 28th 2012 from the print edition
The Russian Orthodox church, which has long found itself in a symbiotic embrace with Mr Putin, has become a central pillar of legitimacy in this political struggle. Svetlana Solodovnik, who studies the Orthodox church, says that religious leaders work “to nurture a paternalistic mood” among the population and “to teach people to rely on the state and to be grateful for its care”. The trial against the members of Pussy Riot provides an opportunity to use the language of moral outrage to paint those opposed to Mr Putin and the Russian government as louche and untrustworthy, the embodiments of exactly the sort of outside forces that seek to defile Russia and its traditions.

Religious and bureaucratic tongues have become blurred. Vsevolod Chaplin, a spokesman for the church, said that Pussy Riot’s unsanctioned performance in the cathedral is “a sin that will be punished in this life and the next”. The official text of the indictment from the prosecutor’s office speaks of the trio’s “blasphemous acts” that inflicted “weighty suffering on those persons who find their spiritual home in the service of Orthodox ideals”.
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26 Jul 2012
Russia jails Pussy Riot punk rockers

ALJAZEERA
by Jennifer Glasse
July 26, 2012
They say they will appeal the decision. The court upheld their request that the accused women be able to read the case against them, but even in that, the lawyers say, their clients are being penalised. The judge ruled the documents could only be read in the courthouse in central Moscow, meaning the women will have to leave their jail at 5am in order to be able to read the case against them. The lawyers say no breakfast or lunch will be provided to them at the courthouse.

"The petitions and opinions of the opposite side [the prosecution] are decisive in this case, while our opinion is not being considered seriously. So in this situation we are not able to defend our clients 100 per cent," said Mark Feygin, another lawyer for the musicians.

The lawyers contend that the prosecution of their clients is about Putin displaying his power, and believe their clients will be convicted no matter what the law says. Many Russians liken the case to that of jailed businessman Mikhail Khordokhovsky, who many believe to have been imprisoned primarily because of opposition to the Kremlin rather than for crimes against the state.

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25 Jul 2012
The Strange History of Russian Hooliganism

The Atlantic
by Madeleine Kruhly
July 24, 2012
As Anya Schmemann, a long time Russia observer at the Council of Foreign Relations, put it, "The harshness of [Pussy Riot's] incarceration has turned a spotlight on the limits of free expression and revealed a deep polarization between 'old' and 'new' Russia."

But could the return of "hooliganism" really be a sort of echo of last century's backlash against the charge's abuse? Sophia Kishkovsky, a Moscow-based writers for the International Herald Tribune from Moscow pointed out to me, "There are a significant number of people within the church, or at least a prominent and vocal group of intellectuals, and even some clergy, who, even if they are disturbed by the form of Pussy Riot's protest, are even more disturbed by the measures being taken against them."

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