Facing 2 years in jail for singing a song criticizing President Putin in a church, a member of Pussy Riot gestured to the court and said in her show-trial's closing statements, "Despite the fact that we are physically here, we are freer than everyone sitting across from us ... We can say anything we want..."
Russia is steadily slipping into the grip of a new autocracy -- clamping down on public protest, allegedly rigging elections, intimidating media, banning gay rights parades for 100 years, and even beating critics like chess master Garry Kasparov. But many Russian citizens remain defiant, and Pussy Riot's eloquent bravery has galvanized the world's solidarity. Now, our best chance to prove to Putin there is a price to pay for this repression lies with Europe.
The European Parliament is calling for an assets freeze and travel ban on Putin's powerful inner circle who are accused of multiple crimes. Our community is spread across every corner of the world -- if we can push the Europeans to act, it will not only hit Putin's circle hard, as many bank and have homes in Europe, but also counter his anti-Western propaganda, showing him that the whole world is willing to stand up for a free Russia. Click below to support the sanctions and tell everyone:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/free_pussy_riot_free_russia_a/?bUSjPab&v=17312
Last
week's trial is about far more than three women and their 40-second 'punk
prayer'. When tens of thousands flooded the streets to protest rigged
elections, the government threw organisers into jail for weeks. And in June
Parliament effectively outlawed dissent by raising the fine for unsanctioned
protest an astounding 150-fold, roughly the average Russian's salary for a
whole year.
Pussy
Riot may be the most famous Russian activists right now, but their sentence is
not the grossest injustice of Putin's war on dissent. In 2009, anti-corruption
lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who uncovered a massive tax fraud at the heart of
Russia's power dealers, died in jail -- without a trial, on shaky charges, and
with medical attention repeatedly denied. 60 of Russia's elite have been under
scrutiny for the case and its cover-up, and the sanctions the European
Parliament is proposing are on this inner circle.
International
attention to Russia's crackdown is cresting right now, and the 'Magnitsky
sanctions' are the best way to put the heat on Putin and help create breathing
room for the suffocating democracy movement. Let's give Europe's leaders a
global public mandate to adopt the sanctions. Sign the petition now and share
this with everyone:
What
happens in Russia matters to us all. Russia has blocked international
coordination on Syria and other urgent global issues, and a Russian autocracy
threatens the world we all want, wherever we are. The Russian people face a
serious challenge, but we know that people-powered movements are the best cure
for corruption and iron-fisted governments -- and that international solidarity
can help keep the flame of these movements alive. Let's join together now to
show Putin that the world will hold him to account and push for change until
Russia is set free.
With
hope,
Luis,
David, Alice, Ricken, Lisa, Vilde, and the Avaaz team
P.S.:
Avaaz has launched Community Petitions, an exciting new platform where it's
quick and easy to create a campaign on any issue you care strongly about. Start
your own by clicking here:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/petition/start_a_petition/?do.ps.priot
More
information:
Pussy
Riot sentenced to 2 years in jail for stunt against Putin:
Russia
faces angry response to jailing of Pussy Riot members (Irish Times)
Media
Frenzy Over Pussy Riot Obscures Legal Plights Of Lesser-Known Protesters (Radio
Free Europe)
Moscow
election official: I helped rig Russia vote (NBC News)
As US
acts on Magnitsky, Europe debates (The Moscow Times)
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/as-us-acts-on-magnitsky-europe-debates/463107.html
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