Showing posts with label Putin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Putin. Show all posts

Friday, August 17, 2012

Any apologists for the Putin sentence against Pussy Riot should think again






I am amazed that some - even from the centre right - have taken it upon themselves to argue that the two-year prison sentence given to Pussy Riot is justified. Yes of course, it would have been better if the punk group had not sang-anti Putin songs in a Cathedral.

But - this is what punk groups do:  create outrage and challenge conventional opinion.

The reason for their imprisonment has nothing to do with religious sensibilities, but the sensibilities of Mr Putin, who cannot brook any opposition to his regime.

I hope that the disgraceful imprisonment of this band, will establish a catalyst against the Putin regime and lead to a wave of opposition.  Will Pussy Riot head gear become a symbol of support for a more liberal Russia?  Any Conservative who believes in individual freedom and liberty - has a duty to oppose this disgraceful sentence.

P.S.  A few days ago in a previous blog, I wrote that Putin should read Solzehnitysn's great book 'The First Circle'.  The lesson of that book is that the imprisoned are often more free than those who pass the sentence - a point made by Pussy Riot during their trial.

I reprint my blog below:


I did my post-graduate degree in post-Soviet politics - looking at the forces against liberalisation after theattempted coup against Gorbachev in 1991.

One of the books I came across at the time - amongst the greatest books I have ever read - was The First Circle by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. The story is set - over a few days -in a Prisoners' Labour Camp during the time of Stalin. As the tale unfolds, the reader comes to realise that the inmates are actually the ones who are free, and the guards and bureaucrats who rule over them, are the real prisoners. This is because , whilst the inmates have nothing to lose, the guards et al, live under a culture of fear and witch-hunts, knowing that they may be the victims of purges to come.

I thought of this book, over the past couple of days, when I heard about the story of the Pussy Riot Trial, currently going on in the Moscow High Court. Pussy Riot, (a kind of female Sex Pistols crossed with Russell Brand) is an anarchistic female pop group - that chose to perform an anti-Putin concert in a Russian Orthodox Church.

Under the cover of 'disrespect towards religion', members of the Group were imprisoned and now face a three year sentence. One of the group leaders, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova - in an uncanny echo of Solzhenitsyn - has argued in court that the members of her group, are freer than the prosecutors they face.

As The Guardian reports:

"Even though we are behind bars, we are freer than those people," she said, looking at the prosecution from inside the glass cage where she and her two bandmates, Maria Alyokhina and Yekaterina Samutsevich, have spent the nine-day trial. "We can say what we want, while they can only say what political censorship allows".

The Trial of Pussy Riot begs the question as to whether Russia is retreating back into the Soviet days of The First Circle:  A State which dissent is shut down through a mixture of threats and repression.

P.S.  You can read more about the First Circle here.  More details about Pussy Riot are on this BBC Weblink.

by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow. 






by Robert Halfon MP - Working Hard for Harlow.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Can the democratic spring spread to Russia?

Whilst much of Western Europe has been focused on the European Union Summit, in the East, democracy is stirring.

In Russia, after some years of retreating from democracy, - with the curtailment of a free press and the weakening of the rule of law - something quite incredible is happening.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin (former President and likely to be next President), once lauded, has been jeered at in public events - something unthinkable, even a few months ago. The recent Parliamentary Elections, are widely regarded to have been fixed in favour of the ruling regime.

Now there are demonstration on the streets, in major city across Russia. Mr Putin faces the first real challenge to his rule.

I studied my postgraduate degree in Russian politics - straight after the failed coup in 1991 against Gorbachev. At the time many hoped that with Boris Yeltsin, real democracy was coming to Russia, to displace the totalitarian Soviet Socialist Republic. Sadly, the political forces against liberalisation were immense: the failures of Yeltsin and the corruption of the old Communist Party elite, led to the KGB (now known as the FSB) gradually reasserting control - through Putin's de facto coup d'etat against Yeltsin in December 1999.

Could the recent overthrowal of tyrants across the Middle East be the catalyst for Russian democracy? Can it finally be the end of Kremlin authoritarianism? Let us hope so: one thing is certain. The Russian people face very difficult times ahead.

P.S. You can read more here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/8948495/Russia-election-protests-tens-of-thousands-gather-for-biggest-demonstration-since-fall-of-USSR.html