7 years of prison for pussy riot?

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yr0jNui5Qw8

http://freepussyriot.org/

Sébastien, Monday, 30 April 2012 02:56 (thirteen years ago)

see, now that's punk rock

Choc. Clusterman (contenderizer), Monday, 30 April 2012 03:42 (thirteen years ago)

"The charge is pussy riot, the verdict is guilty and the sentence is 7 years. This court stands in recess"

cosi fan whitford (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 30 April 2012 09:59 (thirteen years ago)

http://i45.tinypic.com/2qti9m8.gif

sleepingbag, Monday, 30 April 2012 10:05 (thirteen years ago)

That is a misleading URL

I'M THAT POSTA, AAAAAAAAAH (DJP), Monday, 30 April 2012 12:38 (thirteen years ago)

One Russian paper apparently translated Pussy Riot on their English-language site as "Uprising of the Uterus".

And I have been called "The Appetite" (DL), Monday, 30 April 2012 12:39 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALS92big4TY

Mordy, Monday, 30 April 2012 12:41 (thirteen years ago)

oh sorry, same vid at op. missed it somehow

Mordy, Monday, 30 April 2012 12:44 (thirteen years ago)

I'd be pretty surprised if they did go to jail - a suspended sentence is more likely. The chance for the state to (in their minds) look magnanimous in the eyes of the international community is more important than suppressing a punk band.

Just like you, except hot (ShariVari), Monday, 30 April 2012 12:56 (thirteen years ago)

Oh man, they are singing Bogoroditsa

We did that in college

I'M THAT POSTA, AAAAAAAAAH (DJP), Monday, 30 April 2012 12:59 (thirteen years ago)

The chance for the state to (in their minds) look magnanimous in the eyes of the international community is more important than suppressing a punk band.

Don't know about that. They've been held without trial for the past two months - and the hearing's still not scheduled til June.

sean gramophone, Monday, 30 April 2012 13:00 (thirteen years ago)

We'll see. There's obviously no chance of them actually looking magnanimous under the circumstances but i wouldn't be surprised if it ended up like the cases you have in Thailand of people being given suspended sentences or being pardoned after insulting the King. The message is clear - don't fuck with authority - but the fiction that the state is fundamentally reasonable is partially maintained.

Just like you, except hot (ShariVari), Monday, 30 April 2012 13:03 (thirteen years ago)

I really want to take this seriously, and eventually I will, but at the moment I am still in the "cracking up every time I read the name 'Pussy Riot'" phase of engagement with this story

I'M THAT POSTA, AAAAAAAAAH (DJP), Monday, 30 April 2012 13:50 (thirteen years ago)

three months pass...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/aug/03/pussy-riot-trial-russia

StanM, Saturday, 4 August 2012 05:55 (thirteen years ago)

Times have had 3 stories about Pussy Riot since this happened. I imagine some sub-editor was trying to win a bet.

You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike. (hugo), Saturday, 4 August 2012 06:35 (thirteen years ago)

It has been getting coverage on Radio 4's Today programme as well.

Damo Suzuki's Parrot, Saturday, 4 August 2012 11:23 (thirteen years ago)

Good long piece here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jul/29/pussy-riot-protest-vladimir-putin-russia?intcmp=239

ledge, Saturday, 4 August 2012 12:01 (thirteen years ago)

verdict in a few hours...?

Harvey Cartel (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 7 August 2012 21:52 (thirteen years ago)

valiant, graceful closing statement:

http://chtodelat.wordpress.com/2012/08/08/yekaterina-samutsevich-closing-statement/

, Blogger (schlump), Friday, 10 August 2012 11:54 (thirteen years ago)

amazing, everybody read that

goole, Friday, 10 August 2012 15:30 (thirteen years ago)

yeah, that's fantastic

keeping things contextual (DJP), Friday, 10 August 2012 15:33 (thirteen years ago)

http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/08/the-riot-girls-style/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/They_shall_not_pass

I confess to not previously having known the origin of the No Pasaran slogan, worn by a bandmember

curmudgeon, Friday, 10 August 2012 15:36 (thirteen years ago)

Amnesty International USA (AIUSA) will stage a solidarity concert this Friday, August 10, from 5:30 - 8:00 p.m. outside the Russian embassy (corner of Wisconsin Ave. and Edmunds St., NW Washington DC) in support of the Russian punk rock group Pussy Riot.

AIUSA supporters and local D.C. music groups and artists, including indie and punk rock bands Brenda, Möbius Strip and Sad Bones, will call for the release of the prisoners of conscience. From 5:30 - 8:00 p.m., AIUSA will host a concert directly outside the embassy, as high-energy activists dressed in full Pussy Riot regalia lead chants and musical performances.

curmudgeon, Friday, 10 August 2012 15:41 (thirteen years ago)

agree that statement is great

wonderfully emblematic of a certain strain of blunt cynicism & black humor in Russian leftism that I find really appealling

xp

hologram sticker of Ken Griffey Jr. at Denny's (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 10 August 2012 15:42 (thirteen years ago)

Excellent

sive gallus et mulier (Michael White), Friday, 10 August 2012 15:44 (thirteen years ago)

Agreed. Rolling Stone had the following from the closing statements of the other band members:

"I, like Solzhenitsyn, believe that words will crush concrete," said Pussy Riot's Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, standing in front of a slit in the glass and metal cage where the band's three members have been held throughout their trial. "We sit in a cage, but we didn't lose. And the dissidents didn't lose. Disappearing in psychiatric wards and jails, they convicted the regime."

"At Brodsky's trial, his poems were also dubbed 'so-called poems' and weren't read – just like the witnesses just watched our video on the Internet," added another band member, Maria Alyokhina. "I am not afraid of you. You can take away my 'so-called' freedom, but you can never take my inner freedom."

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/pussy-riot-make-final-pleas-in-moscow-court-20120808

curmudgeon, Friday, 10 August 2012 16:49 (thirteen years ago)

<3

j., Friday, 10 August 2012 17:38 (thirteen years ago)

The statements were very good.

It'll be a huge deal if they are jailed - not just because it would be a crack in the veneer of the government's respectability but because it would be a massive over-reaction to an imaginary threat. They pose no danger to the political status quo - if the government treats them like they do then they're losing it. It has been a PR disaster from the start and if they compound that mistake with a jail term it'll show how rattled they are.

Putin's public statements recently have been urging the courts to show leniency, while not talking down the supposed seriousness of the crime. That, to me, reinforces the idea that they'll get time served or a suspended sentence but it's really difficult to predict.

Temporarily Famous In The Czech Republic (ShariVari), Friday, 10 August 2012 17:39 (thirteen years ago)

Not sure that Putin really cares that much about the pr damage. Look at his approach to Syria.

curmudgeon, Friday, 10 August 2012 22:08 (thirteen years ago)

Syria doesn't make any difference to the legitimacy of his power, which is the primary thing he's interested in.

Temporarily Famous In The Czech Republic (ShariVari), Friday, 10 August 2012 22:11 (thirteen years ago)

look at his approach to life

tauheed & cambria (J0rdan S.), Friday, 10 August 2012 22:12 (thirteen years ago)

needs to kiss more boys on the stomach obviously

the choogler and the chosen one (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 10 August 2012 22:12 (thirteen years ago)

FREE PUSSY RIOT Public Reading

Thursday August 16 @ Liberty Hall at The Ace Hotel in New York

This Thursday night, August 16th @ 7:30pm, on the eve of the trial's verdict, Pussy Riot's inspirational court room statements will be read by supporters of the Free Pussy Riot movement, including Chloe Sevigny, Eileen Myles, Karen Finley, Johanna Fateman, Mx Justin Vivian Bond (+ others to be announced) info here.

The verdict for the Pussy Riot trial will be stated on Friday August 17 @ 3pm Moscow Time (8am EST). ALSO: There will be a march and rally on Friday, info here. Free Pussy Riot encourages any artists / activists to join on Thursday evening and Friday in solidarity with the three detained women, Maria Alekhina, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Ekaterina Samucevich of Pussy Riot.


WHO:
FREE PUSSY RIOT
In support for the release of the members of the feminist performance Art group Pussy Riot; Maria Alekhina, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Ekaterina Samucevich.
http://www.freepussyriot.org/
https://twitter.com/freepussyriot
]#FreePussyRiot
#LetOurSistersGo

WHAT:
On the eve of the verdict in the Pussy Riot trial, an energetic evening of readings of the inspirational court room statements by the detained women of Pussy Riot. The narrated program will also include selected prison letters and other translated material along with court room attendees written observations.



Writers:
Katja Samutsevich
Nadia Tolokonnikova
Masha Alyekhina


Confirmed Readers:
Chloe Sevigny
Eileen Myles
Karen Finley
Johanna Fateman
Mx Justin Vivian Bond

WHERE:
Liberty Hall at the Ace Hotel
20 West 29th Street.
New York, NY 10001

WHEN:
Thursday, August 16th
Doors open at 7:30pm
Free and open to the public.

dow, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 18:39 (thirteen years ago)

tempting!

one dis leads to another (ian), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 18:51 (thirteen years ago)

Karen Finley is still around. Wow.

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 18:52 (thirteen years ago)

Update: the xpost reading etc will be streamed live 8/16 here: https://new.livestream.com/accounts/1294758/events/1050371
re more readers and maybe others to be added, check here https://www.facebook.com/events/336406896449171/

dow, Wednesday, 15 August 2012 21:55 (thirteen years ago)

There is still something inherently not quite right about the phrase Free Pussy Riot.

But yeah, please let them go, mr. Putin.

StanM, Wednesday, 15 August 2012 22:09 (thirteen years ago)

my butt was on RT with some other butts that in concert had FREE PUSSY RIOT written on them while pointed at the russian embassy

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 16 August 2012 01:13 (thirteen years ago)

I know if there's one person that can sway Putin and his gang, it's Chloe Sevigny!

crustaceanrebel, Thursday, 16 August 2012 04:10 (thirteen years ago)

damn a hoos butt even down for some insurrection

contenderizer, Thursday, 16 August 2012 04:13 (thirteen years ago)

Free Hoos Butt

StanM, Thursday, 16 August 2012 04:21 (thirteen years ago)

Pussy Riot

WheatusVEVO (Hungry4Ass), Thursday, 16 August 2012 05:08 (thirteen years ago)

FREE PUSSY RIOT

WHO:
PUSSY RIOT

WHAT:
PUSSY RIOT

WHERE:
PUSSY RIOT

WHEN:
PUSSY RIOT

contenderizer, Thursday, 16 August 2012 05:34 (thirteen years ago)

^ chorus

contenderizer, Thursday, 16 August 2012 05:34 (thirteen years ago)

From BBC News:

BREAKING NEWS: Three women from the Russian punk band Pussy Riot found guilty of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred

Arvo Pärt Chimp (Neil S), Friday, 17 August 2012 11:25 (thirteen years ago)

World goes back that little step further into the Middle Ages.

Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 17 August 2012 11:30 (thirteen years ago)

Fittingly some middle aged and Middle Aged cockfarming Oxford professor was defending Putin on Today this morning.

ledge, Friday, 17 August 2012 11:32 (thirteen years ago)

The verdict was pretty much inevitable. The sentencing will be the critical thing here.

Temporarily Famous In The Czech Republic (ShariVari), Friday, 17 August 2012 11:32 (thirteen years ago)

But guys! Guys! The Ecuadorean embassy could still ~totally~ offer them asylum, right?

Oh.

Shepton Mullet (White Chocolate Cheesecake), Friday, 17 August 2012 11:35 (thirteen years ago)

From The Guardian:

Some very blunt words from pop star Kate Nash, who perhaps far more than Madonna has the power to get a lot of teenage girls from around the world mobilized in favour of Pussy Riot.

Or possibly not.

Temporarily Famous In The Czech Republic (ShariVari), Friday, 17 August 2012 12:07 (thirteen years ago)

Yeah, because when Men get sent to prison, there's always someone in the crowd shouting "didn't he think about how this'll affect his KIDS??"

oh, wait..

Mark G, Tuesday, 28 August 2012 10:08 (thirteen years ago)

Yes whoever said it's EITHER/OR is pretty wrong.

If I want to find out more about what is about from a standpoint of 'Why did they go to jail for protesting?' I would probably read up on the history and politics of Russian suppression of speech before reading up on the history of feminism.

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 28 August 2012 14:30 (thirteen years ago)

i could do with reading something about feminism in russia, actually

thomp, Tuesday, 28 August 2012 14:39 (thirteen years ago)

i mean, more than (more historical than?) the half a dozen paragraphs on open democracy. i gather it has a kind of weird history, due to various western-world-centric assumptions of a lot of second-wave & after feminism not really working over there

thomp, Tuesday, 28 August 2012 14:41 (thirteen years ago)

I agree w Hoos re exploitation, making money off a kewl rad cause, good to take a hard look before and after any donations.

dow, Wednesday, 29 August 2012 02:27 (thirteen years ago)

http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/artsdesk/music/2012/08/29/listen-d-c-s-tribute-to-pussy-riot/

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 29 August 2012 19:08 (thirteen years ago)

Uh.

http://www.factmag.com/2012/08/30/free-pussy-riot-written-in-blood-at-double-murder-scene/

emil.y, Thursday, 30 August 2012 17:17 (thirteen years ago)

I would not be surprised if that was a complete fabrication

chicago rap twitter luminary (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 30 August 2012 19:47 (thirteen years ago)

"At the crime scene, on the wall of the apartment was discovered an inscription presumably written in blood: 'Free Pussy Riot'," said the committee, which is Russia's top investigative body and answers to Putin.

O RLY

chicago rap twitter luminary (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 30 August 2012 19:48 (thirteen years ago)

Oh yeah, me neither. That was pretty much what the 'uh' was about, really.

Though even if true it says nothing about the case itself, and everything about how people like to make themselves part of a narrative (see also: number of people corroborating 'roar' story re the fictional Essex Lion).

emil.y, Thursday, 30 August 2012 19:49 (thirteen years ago)

The partner of the younger victim has confessed and said that he wrote the slogan to throw police off.

Temporarily Famous In The Czech Republic (ShariVari), Saturday, 1 September 2012 14:06 (thirteen years ago)

freed

a hauntingly unemployed american (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 12 September 2012 18:02 (thirteen years ago)

wait ha sorry no called to be freed but unless they are playing a subtler game than it looks like they are playing w/ impressions of medvedev's independence that's p much the same thing

a hauntingly unemployed american (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 12 September 2012 18:10 (thirteen years ago)

four weeks pass...

One member has been released after appeal, the other two will have to serve their terms, it seems:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2012/oct/10/pussy-riot-member-freed-moscow

Go Narine, Go! (ShariVari), Wednesday, 10 October 2012 12:35 (twelve years ago)

oh I was just about to post the CNN.com version of this story

Technology of the Big Muff (DJP), Wednesday, 10 October 2012 17:04 (twelve years ago)

nine months pass...

Navalny has more on him than consorting with nationalists?

― Pilot Inspektor Leee (Leee)

Probably on his way to jail for timber fraud:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-23352688

Inte Regina Lund eller nån, mitt namn är (ShariVari), Thursday, 18 July 2013 09:01 (twelve years ago)

A new song about the petrostate:
http://youtu.be/qOM_3QH3bBw

Some band commentary:
http://en.pussy-riot.info/blog/2013/7/16/red-prison-tour

A rough translation of the lyrics:
http://www.voanews.com/content/new-pussy-riot-video-targets-oil-industry/1702801.html

one way street, Thursday, 18 July 2013 19:52 (twelve years ago)

two months pass...

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/sep/23/pussy-riot-hunger-strike-nadezhda-tolokonnikova

dlp9001, Tuesday, 24 September 2013 01:42 (eleven years ago)

two months pass...

Amnesty?

http://rt.com/news/amnesty-bill-putin-parliament-951/

Ned Raggett, Monday, 9 December 2013 18:08 (eleven years ago)

http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/23/world/europe/russia-pussy-riot-member-freed/index.html?hpt=hp_t2

how's life, Monday, 23 December 2013 14:14 (eleven years ago)

two weeks pass...

http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/foreigners/2014/01/pussy_riot_members_after_release_they_re_launching_a_prisoners_rights_movement.html

actual content from slate for once, incl. accounts of their prison time, activist plans etc.

j., Saturday, 11 January 2014 00:14 (eleven years ago)

three weeks pass...

this is great
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/432806/february-04-2014/pussy-riot-pt--1

Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Thursday, 6 February 2014 03:49 (eleven years ago)

also, this goes without saying, but nadya <3 <3 <3

Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Thursday, 6 February 2014 04:10 (eleven years ago)

But their newfound acclaim did not sit smoothly with the other, still-anonymous members of Pussy Riot. Hours before the concert, those women emailed an open letter — translated into English — to supporters of the group.

“We are very pleased with Masha’s and Nadia’s release,” they wrote. “We are proud of their resistance against harsh trials that fell to their lot, and their determination by all means to continue the struggle that they had started during their stay in the colonies.

“Unfortunately for us,” the letter continued, “they are being so carried away with the problems in Russian prisons, that they completely forgot about the aspirations and ideals of our group — feminism, separatist resistance, fight against authoritarianism and personality cult, all of which, as a matter of fact, was the cause for their unjust punishment.”

Ms. Tolokonnikova and Ms. Alyokhina, who have taken pains to say they are no longer members of Pussy Riot, refused to communicate with the existing members of the group.

“Yes, we lost two friends,” the letter said, “but the world has acquired two brave, interesting, controversial human rights defenders.” It was signed, under assumed names, by six members of the group.

Backstage before the show, in a dressing room adjacent to Lauryn Hill’s, Ms. Tolokonnikova and Ms. Alyokhina had no comment about the letter.

how's life, Thursday, 6 February 2014 14:17 (eleven years ago)

I didn't realise they'd left Pussy Riot. Have they said why?

What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 6 February 2014 14:21 (eleven years ago)

They've formed their own NGO. I get the impression they were uneasy with the way 'Pussy Riot' had been turned into (or at least viewed by some people as) a brand / pop group.

I'm not sure whether they're still part of the Voina art collective though.

Ramnaresh Samhain (ShariVari), Thursday, 6 February 2014 14:26 (eleven years ago)

Or, at least, they didn't feel that the band set-up had anything left to offer the causes they were promoting.

Ramnaresh Samhain (ShariVari), Thursday, 6 February 2014 14:28 (eleven years ago)

Smart decision

What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 6 February 2014 15:15 (eleven years ago)

this goes without saying

Yet...

Johnny Fever, Thursday, 6 February 2014 15:19 (eleven years ago)

For context, this interview with the idiotic socialite-turned-campaigner Ksenia Sobchak was done the day before they said they were no longer part of the project. Probably wasn't the direct cause but highlights some of the problems:

http://www.buzzfeed.com/miriamelder/12-ridiculous-moments-from-pussy-riots-first-tv-interview?s=mobile

Worth it for the reaction gifs alone.

Ramnaresh Samhain (ShariVari), Thursday, 6 February 2014 18:10 (eleven years ago)

'what's up with your eyebrows?'

http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/2013-12/enhanced/webdr06/26/20/anigif_enhanced-buzz-18331-1388107656-2.gif

j., Thursday, 6 February 2014 18:31 (eleven years ago)

What is up with her eyebrows?

Eats like Elvis, shits like De Niro (Tom D.), Thursday, 6 February 2014 18:38 (eleven years ago)

Does anyone else always hear "...and they put you on the dayshift" at the end of this thread title?

Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Friday, 7 February 2014 15:40 (eleven years ago)

well that doesn't scan

j., Friday, 7 February 2014 15:44 (eleven years ago)

A new twist. They say they never left Pussy Riot and don't know who wrote the open letter claiming they had.

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/feb/11/nadezhda-tolokonnikova-maria-alyokhina-never-left-pussy-riot

What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 11 February 2014 15:09 (eleven years ago)

sadly this is all pretty much textbook radical leftist infighting. my political inclinations and sympathies lie with the anonymous members fwiw

How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 11 February 2014 16:31 (eleven years ago)

this is horrifying, and unbelievable. the NYT article about the return of the cossacks is very worthwhile reading:

The Cossacks Are Back. May the Hills Tremble.

By ELLEN BARRY

STAVROPOL, Russia — Outside this city’s police headquarters on a recent night, a priest in a purple velvet hat and gold stole moved from one man to the next, offering a cross to be kissed and drenching their faces with holy water from a long brush.

And so began another night of law enforcement as Cossacks, the fierce horsemen who once secured the frontier for the Russian empire, marched out to join the police patrolling the city.

In his third term, President Vladimir V. Putin has offered one clear new direction for the country: the development of a conservative, nationalist ideology. Cossacks have emerged as a kind of mascot, with growing financial and political support.

The Kremlin is dipping into a deep pool of history: Cossacks are revered here for their bravery and pre-modern code of honor, like cowboys in the United States or samurai in Japan. But their legacy is bound up with battle and vigilante-style violence, including campaigns against Turks, Jews and Muslim highlanders.

These days men in Cossack uniforms are making appearances all over Russia, carrying out blustery raids of art exhibits, museums and theaters as standard-bearers for a resurgent church. But here on Russia’s southern flank, the Cossack revival is more than an idea. Regional leaders are granting them an increasing role in law enforcement, in some cases explicitly asking them to stem an influx of ethnic minorities, mainly Muslims from the Caucasus, into territory long dominated by Orthodox Slavs.

“We’ve lived cheek to cheek with them, and sometimes we fought with them, and we probably understand them better than a Russian from Moscow,” said Staff Capt. Vadim Stadnikov, head of security for the Terek Cossack Army, whose office displays a portrait of Czar Nicholas II. “They respect strength here.”

“With police it is a short conversation — you committed a crime, here’s the punishment,” he said. With Cossacks involved, he added, “There is a prophylactic effect, a kind of education. They come here. Take this group of young people. Explain to them the traditions of the Orthodox, Slavic, Cossack people of the city of Stavropol. What our rules are. How we live here.”

A series of violent episodes have underlined the potential for trouble in this incendiary and heavily armed part of Russia. This month, a Cossack chieftain was fatally shot trying to arrest a drunken man who had taken hostages in the neighboring region of Krasnodar. At the chieftain’s funeral, Cossacks in crimson coats, carrying leather whips and sabers, streamed after a riderless horse, a sight that could have dated from the 16th century.

Afterward, a top official said the time had come for the state to allow Cossack patrolmen to carry traumatic guns, nonlethal weapons that can inflict severe injuries at close range — a proposal that has been endorsed by the governors of Krasnodar and Stavropol.

“Some human rights activists, some ill-wishers, talk a lot about whether it’s necessary or not necessary,” Nikolai A. Doluda, chieftain of the Kuban Cossack Army and a deputy to the governor, told Russian television. “This terrible, frightening event underlines the fact that it is necessary.”

Historians still argue about who the Cossacks were — descendants of escaped serfs or Tatar warriors, an ethnic group in their own right or a caste of horsemen. They played a crucial role in colonizing the south for the Russian empire, and later turned on peasant and worker uprisings, defending the czar.

The Bolsheviks nearly obliterated them, deporting tens of thousands in a process they called “de-Cossackization,” but the image of the Cossack, wild and free, was a permanent part of the Russian imagination.

When Tolstoy sat down to write his classic novel “The Cossacks,” he set it near present-day Stavropol, where the Terek River divided the Muslim-populated mountains from the steppes, which were Cossack country. In a scene taught to generations of schoolchildren, a young Cossack spots a Chechen swimming across the Terek disguised as a log and shoots him.

The notion of an ethnic dividing line is widely accepted to this day, but it is running up against demography. Muslim ethnic groups in the Caucasus have a high birthrate, and Russians are abandoning the steppe. About 81 percent of Stavropol’s population is ethnic Russian, but that share has been shrinking for decades, the International Crisis Group has reported.

This rapid change is unsettling to ethnic Russians in Stavropol, who sometimes refer to the newcomers as “shepherds.” Gennady A. Ganopenko, 42, said he grew up in a city so homogeneous that “the sound of a non-Russian language was grounds for a brawl.”

“Earlier, this was the gate to the Caucasus,” he said. “We opened the gate, and then the gate came off the hinges.”

The Cossack revival seeks to slow this trend. Last summer, Aleksandr N. Tkachev, the governor of the Krasnodar region, to the west, took aim at his neighbors in the Stavropol region, saying so many Muslims had resettled there that Russians no longer felt at home. The region, he said, no longer served its traditional function as an ethnic “filter.”

To crack down on illegal migration, he announced the creation of a salaried force of 1,000 Cossack patrolmen, which — he explained in a speech to law enforcement officers — would not be restrained by the law as the police are. He put it this way: “What you cannot do, a Cossack can.”

Stavropol’s leaders bridled at the speech, but it struck a chord with nationalists. Among them was Boris V. Pronin, chieftain of the Romanov-Cossacks, one of the many Cossack associations in Stavropol not officially registered with the government. Like many people in the region, he said youths from the Caucasus had begun to behave too freely in Stavropol.

“It’s as if I came to your house, slapped you in the face and said, ‘Tonight, I’m going to sleep with your wife,’ ” he said in an interview.

Mr. Pronin has bright blue eyes and the battered nose of a boxer, and he wears a handsome, traditional Cossack uniform. After an ethnic Russian man was stabbed in a brawl with Muslim youths from the Caucasus this winter, he lashed out at regional law enforcement for acting too slowly to detain his assailants. He advocates the creation of a Cossack guard unit with powers equivalent to those of the police, warning that immediate action is needed.

“If a person has a cancer and metastasis has begun, if a professional doctor doesn’t take care of this metastasis, he will die,” he said. “It is the same with society. If there is already metastatic cancer on the territory of Stavropol region, one has to take appropriate preventive measures.”

The rise in official support for Cossacks is troubling to some Muslims, though their official representatives are careful about saying so. An exception was Zainudin Azizov, who, on a recent morning, barreled past herds of sheep and over acres of gray-brown steppe in a Mercedes S.U.V. while music wailed from its dashboard.

“One class is turning out to be somehow privileged,” he said of the Cossacks. “Why don’t they support the whole Russian people? Why are they supporting only this small class?”

Mr. Azizov represents Dagestani families who now dominate in villages at the far-eastern edge of the Stavropol region, and he is particularly irritated by a plan to grant free land in areas like his own to Cossack families being resettled, creating a kind of buffer zone of ethnic Russians. Nor does he like the idea of Cossack patrolmen receiving salaries from the state. While some of the local Cossacks are old friends, he said, others are “skinheads.”

“They join the Cossacks, but then they behave like nationalists,” he said. “They have support from the region, from Moscow. They feel they can do anything they want, that tomorrow they will have protection.”

Indeed, the Cossacks who set out to patrol Stavropol on a recent night felt that they were part of a rising tide. Andrei Kovtun, 29, recalled the ribbing he got from his former colleagues in law enforcement when he first patrolled with the Cossacks, who do not have the right to demand documents, carry weapons or detain people.

Still, on one of his early calls — separating two groups of brawling men — he understood that a Cossack’s presence had a psychological effect. “Are you a cop?” someone asked him, and when he answered, the room went quiet. Mr. Kovtun understood why: Policemen are bound by the law.

“A complaint cannot be made against a Cossack, and a Cossack cannot be fired,” he said. “They know Cossacks are free, and will not think too much about how to take a violator to a police station, but will simply give him a whipping. This is what people are afraid of — that a Cossack will punish the culprit in the old, traditional but fair fashion.”

“However,” he added hastily, “first we should always stop it by force of persuasion.”

Daniel, Esq 2, Wednesday, 19 February 2014 17:53 (eleven years ago)

four years pass...

BERLIN (AP) — Pyotr Verzilov, a member of Russian protest group Pussy Riot, was flown Berlin for treatment late Saturday after falling severely ill. Fellow activists say he was poisoned.
Verzilov was first hospitalized in Moscow on Tuesday and had remained in intensive care, Pussy Riot members said this week. Maria Alekhina, a member of the group, told The Associated Press that he regained consciousness Friday.

Verzilov, his partner Veronika Nikulshina and two other Pussy Riot members served 15-day jail sentences for running onto field in Moscow where soccer’s World Cup final was being played in July. Their protest of what they described as the excessive powers of Russia’s police briefly disrupted the match.

Karl Malone, Sunday, 16 September 2018 17:19 (six years ago)

The dude has "lost his sight, speech and physical mobility," and has (temporary) amnesia. He was poisoned w/a compound of "40 or 50" drugs, designed to quickly disappear in blood & urine.

He's a dual Canadian/Russian citizen. I wonder if Canada will do or say anything.

stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Tuesday, 18 September 2018 21:04 (six years ago)

They're "monitoring the situation".

The book by Masha Gessen, Words Will Break Cement, is fantastically illuminating about Pussy Riot and the prison sentences – including her interviews with Yekaterina Samutsevich, and correspondence with Nadya and Maria.

- https://hazlitt.net/feature/confronting-language-lies-masha-gessen-pussy-riot

sbahnhof, Saturday, 22 September 2018 03:00 (six years ago)

six months pass...

Images with unexpected juxtapositions :)

https://res.cloudinary.com/cognitives/image/upload/dpr_auto,f_auto,fl_lossy,q_auto/zdtjijibwvllwhzizzw3
"Maria Alyokhina of Russian punk protest band Pussy Riot attended the protest. Photo: Thomas Coughlan."

Alyokhina offered her support to the (Ihumātao) protestors, saying her travels around New Zealand had made her aware of the issues surrounding Māori land rights.

“It’s an honour for me to be here and to see how powerful these people are to bring themselves together, because it’s not only about signatures, its about the voice - the powerful voice which they really have,” she said.

– (Newsroom)

This band are so much more punk than the Sex Pistols. (that is to say, none of them have turned rightwing yet)

sbahnhof, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 08:25 (six years ago)

Alyokhina dating, and making excuses for, a violently homophobic white nationalist is a bit suspect tbh.

ShariVari, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 08:49 (six years ago)

...Dmitry Enteo, who attacked Pussy Riot's supporters in 2012.

- https://medium.com/@kharmstimes/for-me-orthodoxy-is-about-freedom-ad36e39894b9

Yes, that is a little strange :s

sbahnhof, Friday, 29 March 2019 08:27 (six years ago)

That seems worse than John Lydon making a commercial for butter tbf.

Don't Go Back to Brockville (Tom D.), Friday, 29 March 2019 10:56 (six years ago)

is it cool to talk about how horseshit this band was now?

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 29 March 2019 14:31 (six years ago)

it was a very bad commercial tho xp

mr greta t. gremlin (bizarro gazzara), Friday, 29 March 2019 15:15 (six years ago)

PR's actual music seems like an afterthought to everything else about them, it's telling that it's barely even mentioned on this thread.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 29 March 2019 17:18 (six years ago)

They're an art/protest collective - they didn't see themselves as musicians, and were surprised when people like Madonna treated them as such. Their original music was just "shouting and making a racket" (which may have been one of the basic ideas of punk, iirc). Their notoriety came mainly because they were put in prison in a dictatorship, unlike butter fiend Lydon over there

sbahnhof, Saturday, 30 March 2019 19:05 (six years ago)

two years pass...

9 more years for Navalny

StanM, Tuesday, 22 March 2022 17:19 (three years ago)


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