Add new comment

The Authorities Have Taken Another Hostage in the Khimki Case

Denis Solopov, who took part in the action outside the Khimki town hall on July 28, 2010, to protest the lawlessness of local authorities and the clear-cutting of the Khimki Forest, has been detained in Kyiv by local police. The arrest took place on March 2, 2011, at the Kyiv Migration Service. Ukrainian authorities had just rejected Denis’s asylum application, a decision that Denis was planning to appeal in court. As stated on its web site, No Borders, a project of the human rights organization Social Action Center, suspects that migration service staff informed the police when Denis would be coming to their office, although they do not admit to this. (see http://noborders.org.ua/ru/o-nas/novosti/ykrainskaya-sistema-predostavleniya-statusa-bezhenca-opasna-dlya-bezhencev/).

On March 4, 2011, the Solomensky District Court in Kyiv ordered that Denis be kept in police custody for forty days. This ruling will be appealed in a higher court. Denis is represented by lawyer Anton Maximov, who was provided by the Kyiv office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

Several months earlier, the UNHCR had officially recognized Denis Solopov as a political refugee, and from that moment he has had the status of a “mandate” refugee enjoying the protection of the UN. If he were extradited from Ukraine to Russia at the request of Russian police investigators, this would constitute a gross violation of international legal norms.

As the case of “Khimki hostages” Maxim Solopov and Alexei Gaskarov has shown, the investigation of those who took part in the July 28, 2010, demonstration has involved flagrant procedural violations, and there have been numerous instances when Moscow Region police officers have used torture to coerce witnesses into testifying. The first hearing in Maxim Solopov and Alexei Gaskarov’s trial has been scheduled for March 14, 2011, in the Khimki Municipal Court.

Denis Solopov is a suspect in this criminal case: prosecutors would like to charge him with violating Article 213 of the Russian Federation Criminal Code (disorderly conduct), and Moscow Region police investigators have placed him on the wanted list. Although there is no serious evidence in the case, Moscow Region police and prosecutors have used the fact that a few windows were broken during the demonstration as an excuse to unleash a full-scale campaign of persecution against social activists. Instead of investigating attacks on journalists and activists in Khimki, the local police continue to hunt down young people who took part in protest actions.

We will be closely following Denis Solopov’s case as it unfolds and will keep you updated as new details emerge.

You can find out more details about Denis’s arrest by calling any of the following phone numbers:

+7 915 212-7417 – Maxim Solopov, Denis’s brother

+380 44 288-9424 – Kyiv office of the UNHCR

+38 097 509-4062 – Irina Fedorovich, coordinator of the No Borders project, Social Action Center

Campaign for the Release of the Khimki Hostages

March 4, 2011

Source

Links on the subject material:

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Author columns

Антти Раутиайнен

In September 2024, I gave a presentation in Dresden about struggles against the right-wing government in Finland. Freedom published a text based on that presentation last September, but due to character limitations I had to skip an introduction to the Finnish party system. This background is...

1 week ago
Антти Раутиайнен

Repression targets Chita anarchists already jailed for war resistance and anti-regime graffiti The regional prosecutor’s office for the Trans-Baikal region in eastern Siberia has submitted a petition to a local court to recognize the “Trans-Baikal Left Association” as a terrorist...

1 month ago
Антти Раутиайнен

Thousands of Russians have been fighting against the invasion to Ukraine. During first month of protests against the war, 15 000 people were detained. Small street actions are still sporadically taking place, although they are heavily persecuted. More than 300 people have been imprisoned for anti-...

1 month ago
ДИАна - Движени...

Translation: volunteers of Autonomous Action. «» The history of solidarity networks in Russia began in 2013, when activists from Autonomous Action and Antijob, most likely members of the Barnaul cell, found information on the internet about the Seattle Solidarity Networks. After studying...

3 months ago