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FILE - Russian political activist Nadezhda Tolokonnikova of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot speaks during an interview with the Associated Press in Moscow, Russia, Sept. 25, 2018. Russian authorities have designated a member of the Pussy Riot punk group, a satirist and an art collector as “foreign agents” as part of efforts to stifle dissent. The Justice Ministry on Thursday Dec. 30, 2021, applied the label to Nadezhda Tolokonnikova. She is a Pussy Riot member who became widely known for taking part in a 2012 protest inside Moscow’s Christ the Savior Cathedral after which she spent nearly two years in prison. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)
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Russian authorities have designated a member of the Pussy Riot punk group, a satirist and an art collector as “foreign agents” as part of efforts to stifle dissent
MOSCOW -- Russian authorities on Thursday designated a member of the Pussy Riot punk group, a satirist and an art collector as “foreign agents,” part of efforts to stifle dissent.
The Justice Ministry applied the label to Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, a Pussy Riot member who became widely known for taking part in a 2012 protest inside Moscow's Christ the Savior Cathedral after which she spent nearly two years in prison.
Journalist and satirist Viktor Shenderovich and art collector Marat Gelman were also handed the label along with several other people.
The “foreign agent” label implies additional government scrutiny and carries strong pejorative connotations that can discredit recipients. Russian authorities have applied the designation to scores of media outlets, civil society groups and individuals, ratcheting up pressure on those who are critical of the Kremlin.
Those designated as “foreign agents” are required to add a lengthy statement to news reports, social media posts and other materials specifying that the content was created by a “foreign agent.”
Earlier this week, Russia’s court on Tuesday shut the country’s oldest and most prominent human rights group, Memorial, citing its failure to identify itself as a “foreign agent.”
Tolokonnikova tweeted that she wouldn't abide by the requirement to mark her posts with the “foreign agent” designation. She said she would challenge the authorities' decision in court, concluding: “Russia will be free.”
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Pussy Riot members leave Russia after facing multiple arrests amid crackdown
Rita Flores is the most recent member of the feminist collective to have been sentenced
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Pussy Riot member Rita Flores was arrested “for no damn reason”, she says
A Moscow court ruled on Monday that Rita Flores, a Pussy Riot member who was diagnosed with Covid-19 while serving one of a string of recent jail sentences in Moscow against members of the feminist political protest collective, will have to return to prison after being released from hospital.
The judge ruled that Flores’s sentence is suspended for her hospitalisation, but she will have to serve another five days and 21 hours, her lawyer told the official Tass news agency. Flores (a pseudonym for Margarita Konovalova), was jailed on 22 July for disobeying a police officer, a day after being detained while on her way to visit Pussy Riot’s Masha Alekhina, who was in a detention centre serving the second of consecutive 15-day sentences .
In a tweet , Pussy Riot described Flores’s arrest as being “for no damn reason” and said that three members of the collective—Alexander Sofeyev, Anna Kuzminykh and Veronika Nikulshina—had left Russia “to take a break from constant arrests for a second”.
Nikulshina, who burst onto the pitch in a police uniform during the 2018 World Cup final attended by President Vladimir Putin, was arrested in May and June, on suspicion that she might disrupt a military parade in Moscow and the Euro 2020 football championship in St Petersburg. Pussy Riot tweeted that the departures are temporary.
Analysts say that the Kremlin is clearing the field before parliamentary elections scheduled for 19 September.
Pussy Riot first gained international fame in 2012 for a “punk prayer” against Putin, corruption and church-state symbiosis led by Alekhina and Nadya Tolokonnikova at Moscow's Christ the Savior Cathedral near the Kremlin. After their release from nearly two years in prison, Alekhina and Tolokonnikova founded Mediazona , a news site devoted to prisoners’ rights. They are also funding their activism via NFTs .
Alekhina and Lucy Shteyn, another Pussy Riot member subjected to repeat arrest in recent months, are accused along with other top opposition activists of “violating sanitary-epidemiological norms” against Covid-19 spread at protests on 23 January in support of jailed opposition leader Aleksei Navalny. Alekhina has been under house arrest since last winter. (Her summer arrests were in addition to that.) On 23 July, a Moscow court extended her house arrest until 8 January 2022.
In an Instagram post several days ago, Shteyn said she had also contracted Covid-19 during her latest prison sentence.
“I came down with covid right at the start of the trial on incitement to covid infection at a rally (finally there is at least someone who actually got infected in the case, but bad luck, it’s not a crime victim, but a defendant),” Shteyn wrote. “It looks like the virus is making its way through the special detention centre; several people have already fallen ill there or after their release. Guess what measures the state, so concerned about sanitary standards, takes before putting everyone in a common cell? Correct, none. But they did not forget to institute criminal proceedings. That is, in fact, they infected me, and I am being tried for it.”
Masha Alekhina and Lucy Shteyn, who have previously served prison terms, were sentenced to 15 days following charges of "propaganda of Nazi symbolism"
She has been sentenced to 15 days in prison for “propaganda of Nazi symbolism” after posting an image featuring swastikas on Instagram
Group faced prison sentence after filming a “punk prayer” against President Putin in 2012 at Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Saviour

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A member of dissident punk group Pussy Riot escaped Russia while disguised as a food delivery worker — a daring journey to “make a statement” against the invasion of Ukraine, she said.
Maria Alyokhina — who spent nearly two years in prison along with bandmate Nadezhda Tolokonnikova after their 2012 arrest for criticizing Russian President Vladimir Putin at Moscow’s main cathedral — said Wednesday she decided she’d had enough while staying at a girlfriend’s apartment in Moscow.
Alyokhina, better known as “Masha,” recalled her escape from Russia to Lithuania during an interview with CNN , saying she had been arrested six times since last summer for her public rebukes of Putin and spent 15 days in jail each time.
“This time I just decided that my tour was scheduled and it’s important for me to make a statement against the war as loud as I can and to speak as loud as I can [on] what I’ve seen in Russia,” Alyokhina said. “So, I made a small change and decided not to spend these 21 days in prison but spend it at the rehearsal studio.”
Alyokhina told CNN she and her girlfriend, Lucy Shtein, donned green jackets while disguised as food couriers to evade Moscow police officers who had staked out her friend’s apartment.
“I think that was Lucy’s idea and she used it first,” Alyokhina told CNN’s Anderson Cooper. “I used it when it was my turn.”
Alyokhina, who said her international passport had been confiscated by Russian authorities, first had a friend drive her to Russia’s border with Belarus before making her way into Lithuania, where she stayed at locations without formally registering.
It took her three tries to get into Lithuania, Alyokhina said.
“The first time was [a] nightmare, second time was OK, they just said no,” she recalled. “First time was terrible. First time was like a search of me, the car of where I was, two hours speaking with terrible KGB investigators and so on.”
Russian authorities announced in April that Alyokhina’s house arrest for her latest legal woes would be converted to 21 days in a penal colony, the New York Times reported Tuesday . Her daring escape came 10 years after being arrested for “hooliganism” during Pussy Riot’s Putin protest in Moscow’s Christ the Savior Cathedral.
“I was happy that I made it,” Alyokhina told the New York Times from an apartment in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. “I still don’t understand completely what I’ve done.”
Alyokhina, 33, said she hopes to one day return to Russia, but it’s unclear if and when that may happen, she said. For now, Alyokhina and 11 other members of Pussy Riot have their sights set on Berlin, where they’ll start a tour Thursday to raise money for Ukraine.
“If your heart is free, it doesn’t matter where you are,” Alyokhina told the New York Times.
Alyokina tweeted Thursday that she “left the Russian state for tea,” leaving behind her electronic bracelet that had tracked her movements in Moscow.
“And in life there was one super adventure more,” she wrote in a post translated from Russian.

Three members of Pussy Riot , the punk feminist art collective that’s been the target of crackdowns from the Russian government since at least 2012, have left the country for a respite from “constant arrests,” the group announced in a tweet . In July, Masha Alekhina, Sasha Sofiev, Ann Kuzminikh, and Veronika Nikulshina of Pussy Riot were re-arrested on charges including petty hooliganism, swearing in public and arguing with a police officer . On Monday, a court in Moscow ruled that Pussy Riot member Rita Flores, who contracted COVID-19 while serving one of these recent jail sentences, will have to serve another five days and 21 hours in prison after being discharged from the hospital .

Alexander Sofeyev, Anna Kuzminykh and Veronika Nikulshina are the Pussy Riot members who’ve reportedly left Russia . Nikulshina drew the ire of the law when she ran onto the field during the 2018 World Cup final dressed in a police uniform; the final was attended by Vladimir Putin. Pussy Riot first drew Putin’s wrath in 2012, when members of the collective performed a song criticizing the President of Russia inside a Christian Orthodox church in Moscow .
After protesting on behalf of the imprisoned anti-corruption activist Aleksei Navalny in January, Pussy Riot members Masha Alekhina and Lucy Shteyn were accused of “violating sanitary-epidemiological norms.” Alekhina has been under house arrest since winter of 2020, and will remain so until January of 2022. Things in Russia have been particularly stringent recently due to the fact that Putin formally banned same-sex marriage in April, and Pussy Riot haven’t been the only outspoken figures to be persecuted by the extent of Russian law.

Yulia Tsvetkova , a Russian feminist artist who was put on trial after being accused of distributing pornography, recently went on a hunger strike to protest the charges against her .




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