The request to put Nadezhda Tolokonnikova behind bars has, however, been rejected by a Moscow court
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot performs in Seattle, Washington on September 03, 2023. © Getty Images / Mat Hayward
Russian investigators have asked a Moscow court to arrest, in absentia, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, one of the founding members of the protest group ‘Pussy Riot’.
The request was considered by the court on Wednesday, with the judiciary body ultimately turning it down. The court did not offer any public explanation for its decision.
The activist had been targeted by Russian law enforcement under a criminal probe into an alleged “religious feelings” insult. Earlier this year, it was revealed the case stemmed from remarks made by Tolokonnikova on social media, though it was not immediately clear which ones. The activist left Russia a few years ago and is now believed to be residing in the US.
Tolokonnikova has repeatedly gotten herself into trouble with the Russian law over her activities with the protest group ‘Voina’ and the feminist punk band ‘Pussy Riot’. Back in 2012, she was jailed along with two fellow members of the band after holding a so-called ‘punk mass’ at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow – one that many religious people found offensive.
The performance was deemed by the court to be a “gross violation of public order, motivated by religious hatred and strafing.” Tolokonnikova was given two years behind bars for “hooliganism,” but was ultimately released under amnesty in late 2013.
Following her release, Tolokonnikova switched to journalism, founding alongside other members of Pussy Riot – including her then-husband Pyotr Verzilov – the online outlet Mediazona. The outlet has been exclusively focused on Russia’s jail and judiciary system, as well as on the alleged persecution of various individuals over their political views in the country.
In late 2021, Mediazona, Tolokonnikova herself, and other individuals associated with the outlet were placed on Russia’s “foreign agents” list. The move “was made on the basis of documents received from authorized government bodies. In particular, according to the information received, these individuals systematically distribute materials to an indefinite circle of persons while receiving foreign funding,” Russian authorities said at the time.