Russia & FSU

‘Pussy Riot’ Ukrainian soldier gets eight-year jail sentence

Pyotr Verzilov was tried in absentia by Moscow court for spreading falsehoods about Russia’s armed forces‘Pussy Riot’ Ukrainian soldier gets eight-year jail sentence

‘Pussy Riot’ Ukrainian soldier gets eight-year jail sentence

Piotr Verzilov, Moscow, July 7, 2020 © Sputnik / Evgeny Odinokov

Moscow district court has sentenced Pyotr Verzilov, once a spokesman for the anarchist punk group Pussy Riot, to a prison term of eight years and four months, for publishing fake news about the Russian military. The activist, who fled the country four years ago, was tried in absentia.

The sentence, approved on Monday, was a month shorter than the prosecution had sought for the defendant. It also imposes on Verzilov a ban on activities related to the administration of websites.

The criminal case against the 36-year-old related to social media posts that, according to prosecutors, amounted to deliberate disinformation about the Russian military. Specifically, he accused troops of massacring civilians in the Ukrainian town of Bucha in 2022. The allegations, which originated from Kiev and its Western backers, have been rejected by Moscow as false.

In November, Verzilov was tried in absentia and sentenced to eight years and six months in prison. However, that verdict was overturned last month by a higher court, over “violations of procedural law.”

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The activist came into the public eye in 2008 after he and members of his Voyna (War) art group staged a performance at the Timiryazev State Biological Museum in Moscow. Voyna described the orgy which the group filmed there as an anti-government protest. Through this group Verzilov met Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, who would later co-found Pussy Riot, and the two would marry.

In 2012, after Tolokonnikova and her fellow Pussy Riot activists staged their “punk prayer” performance at Moscow’s Christ the Savior Cathedral, she and two members of the group were sentenced to two years in prison, on charges of “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred.” Verzilov then briefly acted as the group’s spokesman.

Two years later, he and his associates founded the online news site Mediazona, which has received numerous awards from Western and Russian opposition media organizations. In October 2023, Verzilov announced that he had joined the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

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