© Reuters. Aziz Umerov seems at a portrait of his sister Leniye Umerova, a Ukrainian from Russian-annexed Crimea arrested in Russia, amid Russia’s assault on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine August 11, 2023. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich
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By Lucy Papachristou and Filipp Lebedev
(Reuters) – Timofei Rudenko can not seem to keep out of jail.
The 30-year-old was arrested and detained 5 instances within the house of two months over the summer time for a sequence of misdemeanours together with swearing at passers-by and disobeying cops, in response to Russian courtroom information.
On every day he was launched, after serving sentences of between 10 and 15 days at a petty crimes jail in Moscow, he was promptly picked up for a brand new minor offence and returned to custody, a overview of the publicly accessible paperwork exhibits.
Rudenko’s mom Yulia Kiselyova mentioned she noticed her son being apprehended for the fifth time on July 7, seconds after leaving the jail: “They put him in a automobile proper there and took him to a brand new courtroom,” she advised Reuters, insisting he hadn’t executed something improper and was focused as a result of he’d posted criticism of the warfare in Ukraine on social media in latest months.
Two weeks later, the stakes leapt.
Rudenko, a former Russian navy psychologist, was arrested for a sixth time on July 21 – this time for allegedly justifying terrorism on the web, a extra severe crime punishable by as much as seven years in jail, in response to courtroom information, which give no additional particulars about his alleged offence pending a trial.
Kiselyova mentioned her son, now locked up at a pre-trial detention facility in Moscow, denied all of the alleged crimes.
Reuters was unable to independently confirm Kiselyova’s model of occasions or to contact Rudenko in detention. Rudenko’s attorneys declined to debate his case, whereas Russian police and prosecutor authorities did not reply to requests for remark.
A Reuters overview of Rudenko’s social media account on Telegram did not discover any messages essential of the warfare. “There are not any posts anymore,” Kiselyova mentioned, with out elaborating.
Three Russian human rights attorneys described Rudenko’s expertise for instance of “carousel arrests” – a number of busts for minor offences, with every arrest carried out on the identical day a suspect finishes serving a jail time period, maintaining them in near-constant custody. They mentioned the follow was one of many instruments being deployed by Russian authorities of their clampdown on common dissent in opposition to the 18-month-old battle in Ukraine.
Russia’s high investigative physique, the Investigative Committee, the Inside Ministry and the Prosecutor Basic’s Workplace did not reply to requests for touch upon the phenomenon of carousel arrests or particular person circumstances.
Consecutive jailings aren’t unlawful, as Russian regulation permits judges to order “administrative” detentions of as much as 30 days for minor infractions.
Nonetheless, carousel arrests should buy investigators time to dig into an individual’s previous and on-line exercise to probably open extra severe felony circumstances, in response to Russian rights group OVD-Information, whose knowledge on detentions of anti-war protesters is extensively cited in worldwide media and gives a uncommon impartial barometer of the size of Russia’s crackdown.
“The strain on opposition-minded and anti-war activists is rising earlier than our eyes,” mentioned Ivan Vtorushin, who oversees a staff of greater than 400 volunteer attorneys defending freedom of expression circumstances at Moscow-based OVD-Information.
A Reuters overview of Russian courtroom information recognized seven circumstances of carousel arrests this yr, with the suspects concerned arrested and jailed between two and 5 instances in succession.
Valeriya Vetoshkina, a lawyer with First Division, a Russian rights NGO specialising within the authorized defence of individuals accused of espionage or treason, mentioned she knew of about 10 examples of carousel arrests to this point in 2023, together with the seven recognized by Reuters. She added that the true determine was more likely to be larger.
PUTIN: ‘PEOPLE WHO HARM US’
Since Russia invaded Ukraine – in what Moscow describes as a particular navy operation – its legal guidelines have been tightened to curb public criticism of the battle. For instance “discrediting the military” and spreading “pretend information” about alleged Russian atrocities in Ukraine, two new crimes positioned on the statute e book in March 2022, can land dissenters in jail for years.
In December, opposition politician Ilya Yashin was sentenced to greater than eight years in jail for spreading pretend information concerning the military over a YouTube video launched in April by which he mentioned proof uncovered by Western journalists of a Russian bloodbath of Ukrainians in Bucha, close to Kyiv, and forged doubt on Moscow’s declare that such stories had been fabricated.
In April this yr, Russia’s parliament voted to increase the punishment for treason to life imprisonment from 20 years, with lawmakers citing unprecedented threats to Russia from Ukraine and its Western allies. Justifying terrorism, the cost levelled at Rudenko, criminalises public feedback supportive of teams or people deemed terrorists by Moscow.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, when requested by reporters in late July whether or not he was alarmed by the arrest of Russians who had “doubts” concerning the warfare, prompt the crackdown on dissent was justified at a time of nationwide peril.
“I feel that there ought to be a sure angle in direction of these individuals who hurt us contained in the nation,” Putin mentioned. “We should keep in mind that in an effort to obtain success, together with within the battle zone, we have to comply with sure guidelines.”
Carousel arrests aren’t a completely novel phenomenon, in response to the three attorneys who mentioned the follow was much less frequent earlier than the warfare and largely confined to dissidents comparable to Alexei Navalny, opposition politicians like Yashin and members of punk protest group Pussy Riot, relatively than strange residents.
Using carousel arrests displays how authorities are experimenting with completely different techniques to curb dissent although stay intent on prosecuting circumstances by the e book, mentioned Lauren McCarthy, an affiliate professor of authorized research and political science on the College of Massachusetts Amherst who has researched wartime protest legal guidelines in Russia.
“Russian authorities aren’t dragging somebody off the road and sticking them with a felony cost,” McCarthy advised Reuters.
BALLOON STUNT MAN ‘SCARED’
Leniye Umerova, a advertising and marketing govt for a trend model in Russian-annexed Crimea, was arrested and detained 4 instances between December and Might for a sequence of minor, or administrative, offences together with disobeying a police officer’s request and border-crossing violations, in response to courtroom information. Then on Might 5, the Federal Safety Service (FSB) flew her to Moscow and arrested her on espionage prices, the paperwork present.
The 25-year-old’s brother Aziz Umerov mentioned she was now in Lefortovo jail within the capital. He mentioned his sister, who had declined to take a Russian passport after the 2014 annexation of Crimea, was harmless of any wrongdoing and he believed she had been focused as a result of she had criticized the Ukraine warfare on-line and had posted data on social networks concerning the persecution of Crimean Tatars in Crimea after the annexation.
“Even after the very first administrative arrest in December final yr, I knew that each one this could not finish shortly for my sister,” he advised Reuters.
Reuters was unable to contact Umerova in detention or independently confirm her brother’s assertions concerning the causes for her arrests. The FSB did not reply to questions on her case.
A Reuters overview of Umerova’s Instagram account discovered a number of messages essential of the Russian invasion and supportive of Ukraine. “The world has to cease Putin. Proper now’s the time to behave,” she mentioned in a single put up on Feb. 24 final yr, the date of the full-scale invasion. Her web page additionally featured photos of individuals killed within the warfare and pictures of a pro-Ukraine rally.
Not all “carousel” arrests result in extra severe felony prices, and for some detainees, time spent behind bars is scary sufficient.
Gevorg Aleksanyan, a Moscow-based lawyer working with OVD-Information, defended a person arrested in Might after he tied helium balloons to a flag of the Freedom of Russia Legion, designated a terrorist organisation by Moscow, and set it aloft. A video of the stunt went viral on social media. The Freedom of Russia Legion is a Ukrainian-based paramilitary group of Russians who oppose Putin and the invasion of Ukraine.
After serving 15 days on hooliganism prices over the stunt, Dmitry Golovlyov was detained once more as he was leaving jail and sentenced to a different 15 days for “demonstrating extremist symbols,” in response to Aleksanyan, and courtroom information confirmed.
Golovlyov, a 34-year-old builder, did not reply to a Reuters request for remark. He was not charged a 3rd time, Aleksanyan mentioned. “He’s very scared after this case,” the lawyer added.
In the meantime, ex-military psychologist Rudenko, who had been working as a mechanic after leaving the forces in 2015, stays in custody in Moscow. A date has but to be set for his trial for justifying terrorism. His mom Kiselyova is not hopeful.
“Because the proverb goes: put together for the worst,” she mentioned.