In June
2010, a sharp decline of racist and neo-Nazi attacks was registered. A young girl
from Yakutia became a victim of an attack in Moscow, a Krishnaite was beaten in
Yaroslavl region and a female Jehovah’s Witnesses member in Yekaterinburg. In the
same period of 2009, two people were killed and 29 wounded. Due to the natural delay
of data collection, the current information on 2010 do not reflect the real
situation. We now become aware of most of incidents at least one or two months late.
In all, from
the beginning of the year, 19 were killed and 146 wounded in 33 regions of
Russia.
We deliberately
did not include people who suffered from a group known as ‘Primorye partisans’
who committed attacks mostly against officials of law enforcement services in
Primorsky Kray in the amount of victims. Although there were ultra-rightists in
that group, so far we cannot confirm or deny with confidence that their attacks
were based on ultra-rightist ideological grounds. However, we cannot do without
noting that this story did not only draw a wide response in the public but also
was richly used by the neo-Nazi propaganda for advertising.
In June, a number
of vandalism attacks was registered where ultra-rightists can be suspected of
involvement. The one that drew the widest response was an explosion near the
doors of a synagogue in Tver on June 20. In addition, a Muslim cemetery was profaned
in Chelyabinsk and an Orthodox cross at the laying of a church in Penza.
In June
2010, at least three guilty verdicts were issued in the cases on racist
violence with a hate motive: in Nizhny Novgorod, Izhevsk and Podmoskovye. Seven
people were convicted, four were released because the period of limitation
expired.
In all, from
the beginning of the year, at least 41 sentence was passed for violence with a
hate motive. 144 people were convicted within these hearings (50 of them were
released or given suspended sentences without any additional sanctions).
At least
four sentenced were passed for xenophobic propaganda: in Volgograd, Izhevsk,
Chelyabinsk and Yugra. Seven people were convicted, four of them given
suspended sentences without additional sanctions.
The retrial
against Alexander Yaremenko, editor-in-chief of the Russkoe Zabaikalye newspaper
that was planned for June 2010, failed to finish because the defendant escaped
from the court. Yeremenko’s case on hate incitement was sent for retrial after the
Zabaikalye district court cancel the conviction judgment of 2009.
In all, from
the beginning of 2010, 26 sentences were issued for xenophobic propaganda under
article 282 (inciting hate), 4 under article 280 (claims to extremist activity)
and one under the both articles. 32, 4 people and one person were convicted
respectively, 22 of them were given suspended sentences without additional
sanctions.
We should mention
two sentences more issued in June. First, a person was punished for attempting an
explosion of a church in Vladimir. He was convicted not only for inciting hate
(article 282 part 1) but also for hooliganism with a hate motive (article 213
part 1b) and illegal trade of explosives (article 223 part 1). And in Kurgan, a
sentenced for profaning a mosque was issued under a rather rare article 214
part 2 (vandalism with a hate motive). Such crimes are usually qualified by law
enforcement services under article 282 for some reason.
In June
2010, the Federal List of Extremist Materials was updated only once. It grew from
617 to 621 item.
Only in June
2010, a decision to ban the book The Strike of the Russian Gods (item 289) was
finally taken although it was included in the list in November 2008. On the other
hand, the decision to ban the website UfaGub (item 373) as extremist was
cancelled.
Thus, as of
June 30, the list contains of 621 items of which 33 are included twice and 5 are
put in the list inappropriately for the court decisions on
banning them as extremist are cancelled; one entry is annulled.
The most significant
event in the normative legal sphere was the approval and publication of a June
15, 2010 resolution of the Supreme Court plenary session ‘On the practice of the
use of the Law on Media by the courts.’ The resolution in particular is meant to
defend the media from the increasing practice of persecution on anti-extremist grounds
such as readers’ comments at web forums, quotations of others’ statements, etc.
On the other hand, the Constitutional Court did not take into account a claim
to explain the juridical sense of the ‘social group’ concept. This will certainly
stimulate the continuation of the practice of a free and far too wide
interpretation of this concept by those who apply laws. Thus, for instance, a criminal
case was instigated in June 2010 under article 282 for inciting hate against
the social group ‘police’, this time in a publication in Vechernyaya Ryazan
newspaper.
The practice
of illegitimate use of anti-extremist laws does not stop.
Thus, in June
a bill was approved in the first reading crucially widening the authorities of
the Federal Security Service in the area of administrative persecution for
‘extremist’ activity. The bill in particular becomes an instrument to intimidate
opposition and social activists, exert pressure on them with no possibility to
counteract it in any way.
The anti-extremist
legislation is still being used as an instrument to limit the freedom of
conscience. Thus, a pressure against the followers of Jehovah’s Witnesses is
going on everywhere. Besides, it has become known in June that the religious
literature of the Ron Hubbard’s followers was found extremist in many cases.
This opens possibilities to persecute the followers of this belief as well.
The criminal,
administrative or even ‘informal’ persecution of opposition and social
activists, National Bolsheviks, first of all, does not stop.