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DEMOCRACY
Pussy Riot: symbol of the new anti-Putin opposition
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Oct 10, 2012


The three convicted members of Pussy Riot, almost unknown one year ago, grew into the stars of a global cause celebre symbolising the repression of civic dissent under President Vladimir Putin.

The all-girl punk band, with their home-made balaclavas and neon dresses, from October 2011 to February 2012 staged impromptu performances of protest songs in public places such as a subway station and even Red Square.

But their most notorious action was when the band members on February 21 climbed onto an area around the altar in Moscow's biggest cathedral and performed a "Punk Prayer" with the title "Virgin Mary, Redeem Us of Putin".

Several members escaped and remain at large but Maria Alyokhina, 24, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 22, and Yekaterina Samutsevich, 30, were arrested and in August found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred.

Samutsevich was on Wednesday released after being given a suspended sentence but Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina had their two-year prison camp terms upheld by the Moscow city court.

While some in the Russian opposition movement have said the Cathedral performance was ill-judged and in poor taste, their plight became a rallying cause for anti-Putin activists outraged by the severity of the sentence.

Above all, their emergence symbolised the new breed of young anti-Putin activists embracing the Internet and willing to use bold and original methods to challenge the Russian strongman.

--- NADEZHDA TOLOKONNIKOVA, 22

Possibly the most visible member of the group, Tolokonnikova was born in the Norilsk nickel mining city above the Arctic Circle that Stalin developed using Soviet prison labour.

She studied at Russia's top-rated Moscow State University and is married to Pyotr Verzilov, one of the leading members of the controversial Voina (War) performance art group to which Pussy Riot is closely linked.

Voina won a prestigious Russian prize for painting a 65-metre (210-foot) phallus opposite a security service building in Putin's native Saint Petersburg.

But most notoriously, Tolokonnikova, Verzilov and several Voina members had public sex in a Moscow biological museum in 2008 in a stunt to mock Putin's protege Dmitry Medvedev. Tolokonnikova, heavily pregnant at the time, gave birth days later.

During the trial and appeals process, Tolokonnikova always insisted that the Cathedral stunt was aimed against Putin, not religious believers.

"It hurts me every time I hear that I am accused of rebelling against religion.

This is scary indeed. I do not have and have never had religious hatred inside me. I ask for forgiveness and I have asked for forgiveness before."

--- MARIA ALYOKHINA, 24

The single mother of a five-year-old son is a Greenpeace member who has campaigned and scuffled with police in the past during environmentalists' passionate defence of a small forest outside Moscow.

The campaign against the road building there proved fertile ground for Russian political activism by developing many of the leaders who spearheaded opposition to Putin's return to a third presidential term this year.

Alyokhina's software-engineer mother recently revealed that her daughter was also religious and was only protesting against the Church's open backing for Putin.

In her final appeals hearing statement, she mocked Putin who had described the name of the group as indecent.

"It's hardly more indecent than calls by you, Vladimir Vladimirovich, or your confidants to waste enemies in the outhouse or have the livers of protesting citizens smeared over the asphalt," she said, referring to the colourful pronouncements by Putin and his team.

--- YEKATERINA SAMUTSEVICH, 30

The eldest of the three worked on designing computer software for the Nerpa class nuclear submarine after graduating from a Moscow physics institute.

She left to study photography and eventually graduated from a Moscow multimedia centre.

She joined the Voina performance art group at the same time and was regarded as one of the most active members of a March 2011 campaign to kiss as many policewomen as possible in public.

Samutsevich unexpectedly told the appeals court on October 1 she wanted to replace her lawyer due to differences of opinion over the case. Her new lawyer Wednesday successfully argued that Samutsevich had been apprehended by security before being able to join in the Cathedral performance and she was freed.

"It was a political and not a religious affair... I do not consider the Punk Prayer to be a crime," she said at the appeals hearing.

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Putin stunt backfires as birds fly home on plane
Moscow (AFP) Oct 10, 2012 - Russian President Vladimir Putin's bid to encourage endangered cranes on their winter migration appeared to have failed spectacularly Wednesday when it emerged the birds had been taken back to a wildlife reserve by plane.

The 60-year-old president had already earned mockery when he slipped on a space suit and lodged himself in a motorised hang-glider to guide half a dozen Siberian Cranes -- all hatched in captivity -- over Russia's frozen north.

Yet the news grew even worse for Putin when the environmental oversight agency revealed that the birds he tried to lead in September to northwestern Siberia's Yamal region had failed to fly any further south.

They were put instead like regular passengers on an airplane and flown back home to the sanctuary in the Ryazan region of central Russia.

"The Siberian Cranes took a flight back with the ornithologists last night," Interfax quoted an unnamed source at the Federal Service for Natural Resources Oversight (Rosprirodnadzor) as saying.

The bird stunt seemed extreme to many who have already seen the strongman burnish his macho image by hunting whales and discovering ancient urns while scuba diving -- performances that Putin last month admitted were staged.

Putin explained that flying with the birds was one of his dreams and called the cranes "peaceful" and noble in their mission.

But the flock of six Siberian Cranes that he had guided failed to follow a larger flock of less endangered Common Cranes further south on their migration path once the first winter snows started to fall.

"The first snow appeared last week and the Common Cranes... immediately took off," the Rosprirodnadzor official said.

The source blamed the Siberian Cranes' refusal to follow what should have been their natural instincts on a lack of sufficient acclimatisation time rather than any fault of Putin himself.

"They came a little too late," said the Russian official.

The highly-symbolic image of Putin leading a flock of majestic creatures was broadcast widely across state television and appeared meant to counter signs that he was losing some of his unchallenged authority and popularity.

Putin later underlined the political ramifications of his flight by dropping a joke about not everyone in Russia's splintered opposition movement being ready to follow a natural leader.

"Only the weak cranes refused to fly," he said a few days after his original September visit to the skies.

Some Internet bloggers had noted at the time that footage appeared to show a few of the birds pulling out of Putin's formation during last month's flight in what could be read as insubordination.

Putin's sensitivity about the stunt was underscored still further Wednesday when his official spokesman took just minutes to responded to the bad news about the non-migrating birds.

"We saw the sad reports saying that the Siberian Cranes failed to fly south," official spokesman Dmitry Peskov was quoted as saying by Interfax.

"But we can state with confidence that this programme will be continued," he added in reference to future attempts to guide birds to new nesting locations with the help of gliders and other small craft.



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Israel PM calls early election
Jerusalem (AFP) Oct 09, 2012
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday called an early general election, presenting himself as the only option in the face of the Iranian nuclear threat, upheavals in the Middle East and the global economic crisis. Announcing the move, Netanyahu said the public should go to the polls "as quickly as possible" saying Israel needed to pursue a "responsible security and economic po ... read more


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