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zondag 1 maart 2020
#Worldwide #Information #Blogger #LucSchrijvers: #Update: #anarchist #news and #information from all over the #world - 1.03.2020
Today's Topics:
1. Britain, freedom news: London demo callout: solidarity with
jailed Russian anti-fascists (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
2. icl-cit: The International Conference of Labor Unions in the
Garment Industry began today in Colombo, Sri Lanka
(a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
3. Britain, solfed: THOUSANDS OF UK COMPANIES STEALING WORKERS
WAGES (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
4. Britain, MEDIA: HQ taken over by climate anarchists
(a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
5. US, black rose fed: Martin Sostre - Prison Revolutionary By
Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
6. Poland, Workers' Initiative: 16 months are waiting for
payment. The prosecutor's office and the court see no problem
[machine translation] (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
7. ait russia: Yellow Vests: Act 67 [machine translation]
(a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
8. Ireland, derry anarchists: Russian antifascists sentenced to
6- 18 years prison (a-infos-en@ainfos.ca)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
A new group intending to provide solidarity with persecuted Russian antifascists and anarchists was formed in London last week. They are
organising their first event this Thursday at 6.30pm at the Russian Ambassy in London. Here is the demo callout. ---- This month seven
Russian anti-fascists were jailed with lengthy sentences ranging from six to eighteen years. They were framed and tortured by the Russian
Federal Security Service (FSB) and accused of being members of a fictional terrorist organisation called "The Network". ---- Two other
anti-fascists accused of being part of the organisation dreamt up by the FSB, Viktor Filinkov and Yuly Boyarshinov, have a trial resuming
this week which makes it particularly important to show solidarity.
We are calling on anti-fascists from across London and the south east to protest outside the Russian Embassy on Thursday evening to express
our solidarity with the imprisoned and tortured anti-fascists suffering from this repression. This is part of the international week of
action in solidarity with the prisoners.
6:30pm @ the Russian Embassy, 6/7 Kensington Palace Gardens, London W8 4QP
For more information on the case see: https://rupression.com/en/
What can you do to support the Russian antifascists and anarchists who have been tortured and imprisoned?
Sign the letter published on Scientific.RU.
Donate money to the Anarchist Black Cross via PayPal (abc-msk@riseup.net). Make sure to specify your donation is earmarked for "Rupression."
Spread the word about the Network Case aka the Penza-Petersburg "terrorism" case. You can find more information about the case and in-depth
articles translated into English on this website.
Organize solidarity events where you live to raise money and publicize the plight of the tortured Penza and Petersburg antifascists.
If you have the time and means to design, produce, and sell solidarity merchandise, please write to rupression@protonmail.com.
Design a solidarity postcard that can be printed and used by others to send messages of support to the prisoners. Send your ideas to
rupression@protonmail.com.
Write letters of support to the prisoners and their loved ones via rupression@protonmail.com.
https://freedomnews.org.uk/london-demo-callout-solidarity-with-jailed-russian-anti-fascists/
------------------------------
Message: 2
Delegates from Myanmar, Bangladesh, Spain, Germany and Sri Lanka will discuss common strategies to fight precariousness and allow workers to
achieve their demands through mutual support and international solidarity. ---- 21 February, 2020 in international, Syndicalism0 ---- The
Dabindu Collective, after touring across Europe (where they visited France, Germany and Spain), organized this meeting of unions in the
region, with contributions from the CNT from Spain and the FAU from Germany. The ICL's representative introduced the confederation's
principles and reinforced the idea that rights can only be gained by fighting for them. ---- The Federation of Garment Workers Union (FGWU)
in Myanmar, together with the Solidarity Center, described difficulties with and violations of labor union rights. The Garment Workers Trade
Union Center (GWTUC) of Bangladesh explained that union members and workers who demand improvements are arrested, fired and the victims of
false allegations.
RelatedPosts
International Conference of Labour Unions in the Garment Industry
Statuta Konfederasi Buruh Internasional
[Turkey]Young Workers Association was on the Streets against Economic Crisis
Today, we see that the model of grassroots unions is expanding all over Asia. All participants explained that their organizations are
independent of political parties. Workers make the decisions in their unions, which are also free of hierarchy. The first day of the
conference closed with a workshop looking at all the actors in the textile production chain. The conference will continue on Saturday with
the same participants and a video feed from Brazil and Argentina.
https://www.icl-cit.org/the-international-conference-of-labor-unions-in-the-garment-industry-began-today-in-colombo-sri-lanka/
------------------------------
Message: 3
wage theft ---- Last week, the government announced it would resume naming and shaming employers who fail to pay the National Minimum Wage.
While welcome, this will do little to deter companies from paying workers poverty wages and getting away with it. ---- Currently,
rule-breakers are allowed to simply repay the wage arrears and fines issued by HMRC can be discounted for early repayment, meaning the
average penalty in 2017-18 was only worth about 90% of the wage arrears owed. The availability of self-correction, in effect, means that, in
many cases, employers can underpay wages with no financial consequences, even if they are caught. Research shows that, currently, only one
in eight companies not paying the minimum wage are caught by government inspectors.
Given that the chances of being caught are low, and even when they are caught, often the only punishment that companies face is paying back
what they have stolen, it is little wonder that companies are increasingly not paying the minimum wage. In 2016, one in five workers aged
over 24 was paid below the legal minimum. This figure dramatically increased in 2018 to one in four, with about 365,000 people missing out.
The figures for 2019 show yet another rise, with 439,000 people illegally paid below the hourly minimum wage.
No doubt, the alarming increase in the number of companies not paying up has forced the government to reintroduce the naming and shaming of
employers who fail to pay the National Minimum Wage. The government stopped this practice two years ago, after a concerted campaign
spearheaded by larger companies.
Though the decision to reintroduce naming and shaming should be welcomed - after all, every little helps - it hardly amounts to the
government declaring war on companies who, after all, are breaking the law. It interesting to compare the approach taken by the government
to companies acting illegally with the approach taken towards so-called "benefits cheats", who routinely have their benefits stopped and can
face up to 10 years imprisonment.
The reintroduction of naming and shaming may deter some companies, especially larger companies, but it will do little to stem the overall
rise in companies refusing to pay the minimum wage. The solution is not to rely on pretty feeble government laws but, instead, to mount
campaigns backed by direct action aimed at companies breaking the law.
Here at SolFed, we are proud of our direct actionist approach aimed against companies guilty of wage theft. If you want to get involved or
you are not being paid the minimum wage, please get in touch.
http://www.solfed.org.uk/manchester/thousands-of-uk-companies-stealing-workers-wages
------------------------------
Message: 4
The Green Anti-Capitalist Front have occupied the closed police station to use as a base for week of action ---- Damien Gayle ----
Anarchists from Green Anticapitalist Front, who now hold the keys to Paddington Green police station ---- For almost 50 years, Paddington
Green police station in London was the nexus of the UK's anti-terror policing operations. Its 16 high-security, subterranean cells have held
IRA terrorists, Islamist would-be suicide bombers and prisoners returned from Guantánamo Bay. ---- But, in an extraordinary reversal, it is
now anarchists from groups listed in controversial anti-terrorist guidance who hold the keys to its cell blocks. They have squatted the vast
complex and intend to use it as a base for environmental protest.
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"We've got a whole programme of events[planned for the squat]: workshops, skill shares, film screenings, music," said one of the activists,
who asked to be named as Foster. "Other groups are welcome to come and join us"
Under the banner of what they call the Green Anti-Capitalist Front, the activists at Paddington Green are planning a week of action at the
end of February, including protests in the City. The activists, drawn from groups including Anarchist Federation, the Industrial Workers of
the World and Reclaim the Power, all of which were named in a controversial counter-terrorism document, hope to establish themselves as a
radical alternative to Extinction Rebellion.
The squatters found their way in to what was once described as Europe's highest-security police station just over a week ago. "A
concentrated effort was made to enter the building, using a ladder and gaining access via the roof," the Metropolitan police said. The
squatters did not comment on these claims.
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Targets leftover from firearms training that has been carried out inside the former Paddington Green police station Photograph: Sean
Smith/The Guardian
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They discovered that the police station - which closed in 2018 - has since been used for urban warfare training by police or special forces.
Bullet casings of various kinds were found on the floor and paper targets peppered with bullet holes littered the building. Just one
photorealistic target was discovered - a photograph of a man of south Asian appearance holding a pistol.
Hardened glass panels in doors in parts of the building have apparently been blasted with shotguns. A pin from a grenade was among the
detritus found by the new occupants as they have cleaned up the complex.
The Met told the Guardian that the building had been used for "important firearms training", which has since had to be rescheduled. A
spokesperson said the target was "one of many used by police forces nationally, featuring persons of a range of ages, genders and races,
where the armed officer has to assess whether the person is a potential threat or not," but did not explain why no other photo targets were
found.
The new occupants let journalists from the Guardian in to the fortress-like police station on Friday through an entrance to a large
underground carpark. Elsewhere, external doors were barricaded to thwart attempts at eviction. Although much of the building has been
gutted, lights and plumbing were working.
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An activist from the Green Anticapitalist Front stands in cell in Paddington Green police station's subterranean custody suite Photograph:
Sean Smith/The Guardian
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Paddington Green was built in the 70s, at the height of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, for the detention and interrogation of terrorist
suspects. It soon became notorious. The novelist and scriptwriter Ronan Bennett was held there for four days in 1978.
"If they took you to Paddington Green you knew you were in serious trouble," he told the Guardian. "It had an atmosphere of total lockdown,
of modern surveillance and incarceration ... It had cameras, which in those days were not omnipresent as they are now.
"The place had a bleak finality about it, which prompted the feeling, in me at least, that you were never going to get out."
Four decades later, in 2007, one detainee held there for a week described how he was kept in a windowless cell, fed sleeping pills at night,
forced to endure freezing showers and only allowed exercise in a small, entirely enclosed courtyard while handcuffed and watched by four guards.
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In 2008 the Met responded to criticism from UN human rights monitors by spending £480,000 refurbishing Paddington Green's cells
Photograph: Sean Smith/The Guardian
Unlike XR, which is explicitly pacifist, the activists of GAF say they "respect a diversity of tactics", without elaborating much further.
Asked what tactics they might employ, one merely said they would "assess the situation and find the right tactic for that situation".
Members spoke of their admiration for the methods employed by protesters in France, who more frequently clash with police and cause damage
to property than their comparatively more docile English counterparts - an approach that could yet see them finding themselves inside
custody cells that remain under the control of the Metropolitan police.
------------------------------
Message: 5
Even in this generation, many young activists know of George Jackson, aka "Comrade George," Black Panther leader, revolutionary prison
writer and organizer who was assassinated in August, 1971, in the California penitentiary, San Quentin. ---- Yet, in the late 1960's and
early 1970's, Martin Sostre (1923-2015) was every bit as well known as a prison activist, revolutionary, and jailhouse lawyer, who almost
single-handedly won democratic rights for prisoners to receive and read revolutionary literature, write books, worship alternative religious
faiths, to not be held indefinitely in solitary confinement, and to obtain legal rights to have access to legal rights at disciplinary
proceedings. He was the one responsible for prisoners being able to organize during the prison struggle 1967-1974. These lawsuits changed
prison conditions nationwide.
He had served a sentence in Attica, New York, during the early 1960's and went through a political metamorphosis from a Black Muslim (NOI),
Black nationalist, and later an Anarchist. In 1966, he got out of prison, came home to Buffalo, NY, and started the Afro-Asian Bookstore in
the Black community. Sostre's bookstore became a center of radical thought and political education in that city. A Black "riot" against
police brutality of a Black youth broke out at this time, and Sostre was blamed for this rebellion since many youth visited his bookstore.
The city cops and white political establishment chafed at Sostre's organizing and political education, and decided to shut him down. They
arrested him on July 14, 1967, along with a bookstore co-worker, and charged them with "sale of narcotics, riot, arson, and assault." These
were totally frame-up charges, but he was sentenced to 41 years in prison. Recognizing this injustice, an international campaign was begun
on his behalf by his supporters and fellow activists.
At one point, he became the best known political prisoner in the world, and his case became adopted by Amnesty International, the prisoner
of conscience organization, in 1973. This was a first for U.S. political prisoners and put tremendous pressure on the state of New York and
the U.S. government. Finally, his worldwide defense organization pressured the New York state governor to grant Sostre an executive
clemency, and he was released in 1976.
Historical Importance of Martin Sostre
Sostre's political consciousness and legal activism opened the door for prisoners to have legal and human rights and the ability to organize
at a time of civil rights, Black Power, the New Left, and the Vietnam anti-war movements. At one stage, 1970-1976, the prison movement
became the central protest movement in America, especially after the August political assassination of George Jackson, and the September,
1971 Attica rebellion. The protest at Attica was put down with a bloody massacre by prison and political officials, but it opened the eyes
of millions all over the world to American state violence and racism. A mass prison support movement arose almost overnight, which demanded
human rights for prisoners. There is no doubt that the prior demands of Martin Sostre, in his writings and prisoner's rights lawsuits, who
had been imprisoned at Attica some years previous, played a role ideologically. Sostre's struggle inside as a political prisoner was clearly
bound up with what became the Attica Rebellion.
Contrary to prison officials' accounts which now claim that the so-called Attica prison "riot" had taken place because of a "gang of
criminals" who took guards hostage for no good reason, the truth is New York State officials refused to listen to Sostre or even the federal
courts which over the years had ordered an end to brutality, racism, and mistreatment of the men inside. The prisoners took matters into
their own hands, demanding human rights and an end to racist abuse with the 1971 rebellion, which shook America and the entire world.
Martin Sostre and Me
I met Martin Sostre at the Federal Detention Center in New York City in August/September, 1969. I had just been brought back to the USA from
Berlin, Germany, for hijacking a plane to Cuba earlier that year. He had sued prison officials and been transferred to federal prison to
await a hearing. I didn't know who he was at the time, but someone said he was an "activist prisoner" and that I should talk to him.
A scowling, powerfully built Black man, he looked like a teacher, which in many ways he was, just a revolutionary teacher. So, I went up and
introduced myself, and we started talking about prison generally, but he was interested in my case and how the CIA had captured me, and we
started talking about that. He was concerned that I could be sentenced to death by an all-white Southern jury.
He knew it was a political case, and so we talked about what I could do about it. Almost every day that I saw him, we would go over my case,
and he would give me legal advice. Somewhere along the line, we started talking about revolutionary politics generally, and he bounced a new
word on me: "Anarchist Socialism." I had no idea what he was talking about at the time. I had just come from Cuba, Czechoslovakia,and East
Germany, which called themselves "socialist republics," so I thought I knew all about it. I was wrong. He explained to me about
"self-governing socialism," which he described as free of state bureaucracy, any kind of party or leader dictatorship. Almost every day he
regaled me about "direct democracy," "communitarianism," "radical autonomy," "general assemblies," and other stuff I knew nothing about. So
I just listened for hours as he schooled me.
The initial ideas for Black autonomy, within the overall Anarchist movement, came from these sessions. As a Black Puerto Rican, Sostre felt
alienated from his community, and since much of the analysis about Black oppression and Socialism was by white radicals, he had originally
gravitated into Black nationalism. It was only later during his time in prison that he gravitated into Anarchist Socialism. He told me
endlessly that Socialism and Anarchism were for all people, not just Europeans and well-to-do intellectuals. It was universal. At first, I
had serious doubts about all this, as it seemed just more white radical student ideology. They were not sympathetic to the Black struggle,
and they were not working class or poor.Sostre's ideas, however, were that Anarchists of color must build their "wing" of the Anarchist
movement. He didn't call it Black Autonomy, but that is what it was.
I did not even consider myself at the time as an Anarchist, and did not fully understand what he told me. But I had seen first-hand "Soviet
Socialism" and was not impressed. It was elitist, authoritarian, and oppressive. I could say the same thing about "Marxist-Leninist Maoism,"
which helped to destroy thethe 1960's New Left, and the radical wing of the Black Power Movement, with cult of personality, middle class
snobbery, manipulation, and opportunism.
Even before meeting Martin Sostre, I was definitely already looking for something new, and willing to consider Anarchism. But only years
later, serving life in prison, is when I really started into Anarchist political education, as Sostre suggested. I started reading Anarchist
books and papers, and started corresponding with Anarchist figures and groups all over the world.
These discussions with Martin Sostre were invaluable in broadening my thinking about a radical political alternative. I also found out about
many "unknown revolutions" in Africa, Russia. China, Spain and other parts of the world, as well as early Anarchist labor/radical tendencies
among Eastern European immigrants, especially in the USA (1860's-1900's). Yet, the stickler is that the Anarchist movement generally, had no
ties or solidarity to the Black population in the USA, the UK, or the colonized people of color in the Third World. It was essentially a
white European movement.
Like Sostre had said, we must manufacture our own Anarchist of Color school of thought and revolutionary practice. Nobody can truly speak
for us and fight in our name. Black Autonomy means independence of thought, culture and action. We are not racial separatists, but we must
be sure that we are strong enough to insist on our politics, leadership, and respect within any broader universal movement. We have been
sold out, left out, betrayed, and tricked too many times by internal racism inside majority white coalitions and movements. Black voices
matter! That is why I wrote a small pamphlet in 1972, "Anarchism and the Black Revolution" while I was in prison in 1979.
Conclusion
Martin Sostre has been lost to history because the White Left and Anarchist radical tendencies have had no regard for him or his legacy.
He literally opened the doors for radical prisoners, Anarchist tendencies of color and radical praxis, yet not one institution or movement
today is named after him. This is an outrage which must be recognized or corrected now.
Groups of jailhouse lawyers should name themselves after the man who more than anyone, successfully fought for prisoners' democratic rights,
was an activist who provided an example of a revolutionary political prisoner, and who prefigured the Black-led revolutionary prison
movement, including the Attica rebellion and prison labor and activist movements of the 1970's-1980's.
I became an Anarchist, a jailhouse lawyer, and a prison activist during the 1970's because of Martin Sostre. In fact, it was a result of
observing Martin's international defense committee and seeing how he was able to put pressure on the government, that encouraged me to
create the "Free Lorenzo" movement, which resulted in my own freedom in 1984 from two life sentences. I owe him a tremendous personal debt.
I spoke to him less than a month in a prison cell, but it changed my life. He had a similar impact on many others who never met him, but
benefited from him standing up for their rights.
We don't have him here today in the flesh, but we can at least honor his memory and never let it die!
Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin is a former member of the Black Panther Party, long time organizer and author of the seminal text "Anarchism and the
Black Revolution."
https://blackrosefed.org/martin-sostre-prison-revolutionary-komboa/
------------------------------
Message: 6
On February 11, a solidarity picket with porters and porters 16 months awaiting overdue remuneration was held before the District Court in
Poznan. As the Workers' Initiative wrote in a statement, about 20 people are injured. For some of them, the arrears amount to over PLN
5,000. ---- The remuneration was not paid by the company that in the autumn of 2018 performed on behalf of the Board of Municipal Housing
Resources (ZKZL) a physical security service for six city buildings. Due to violation of employee rights, ZKZL terminated the contract with
her, and she did not pay people money. ---- IP 31 December 2018 notified the prosecutor's office. In the prosecutor's office, competence
disputes were first (whether the case is to be examined in Warsaw or Poznan). In May, only two witnesses (victims) and a representative of
the Workers' Initiative indicated in the notification of the crime. After that, the prosecutor's office basically abandoned broader
operations until November 2019. Only one person was interrogated at that time. In November, three victims (with the support of the union)
lodged a complaint with the court about the sluggishness of the prosecutor's office, demanding compensation.
The first hearing was held on February 11. The Poznan Regional Court dismissed the complaints of the injured persons about the slowness of
the prosecutor's office despite the fact that the case file shows, for example:
- competence disputes continued within the public prosecutor's office for three months (as the prosecutor's office later admitted - without
clear legal grounds);
- after receiving the case file, the police needed a month to send summons for questioning to persons named by name, surname and address in
the notification of the crime
- hearings only began at the end of May;
- one of the letters regarding the list of injured persons dated November 16, 2019 was sent by the prosecutor's office to the notifier
(Employee Initiative) only on
December 17 , i.e. after a month;
- it was only on November 22, 2019 that the police were asked to question the employer's representative, CAPREA - although it was indicated
in the notice;
...and so on.
However, the court did not consider all this to be excessive - instead, it shared the opinion of the prosecutor's office, which claimed that
the actions were taken "on time and without undue delay." At the same time, he stated that the time limit requiring the prosecutor's office
(according to the Code of Criminal Procedure) to complete the investigation within two months is unrealistic. According to the
documentation, the prosecutor's office moved him many times and did not deem it necessary to inform the injured parties or the Workers'
Initiative as a notification.
The prosecution will continue its investigation. IP hopes that the complaint will motivate her to live more.
http://ozzip.pl/informacje/wielkopolskie/item/2587-16-miesiecy-czekaja-na-wyplate-sad-i-prokuratura-nie-widza-problemu
------------------------------
Message: 7
The "central" 67th manifestation of the movement of "yellow vests" in Lille grew into street battles with police special forces. Entering
the battle with the guards of the capitalist order, the protesters erected barricades. ---- The demonstration was announced in advance, but
authorities banned the holding of performances in the city center. As a result, instead of the planned route of 8-10 kilometers, a route of
3 kilometers was allowed. It. as well as detentions for interrogation of activists at the very beginning caused widespread discontent among
the participants. ---- Protesters gathered on the march not only from the northern region of France, but also from other parts of the
country, as well as from Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany ... Several thousand people gathered, including about 200 black-clad black-blockers.
The demonstration moved in the afternoon from Republic Square and soon battles broke out with the police and gendarmes - on the street
Pocht, Sevastopol, Jeanne d'Arc, etc. They resumed repeatedly. Demonstrators bombarded the police with various objects, the police launched
tear gas and stun grenades. To stop police attacks, protesters built barricades of building materials and garbage. During the march, they
beat the windows of banks and stops, turned over a luxury car, set fire to containers with garbage ... There are wounded and arrested
(https://www.francebleu.fr/infos/societe/lille-700-gilets-jaunes-manifestent-et-repondent-a-l-appel-national-1582391983;https://actu.fr/hauts-de-france/lille_59350/appel-national-gilets-jaunes-lille-vives-tensions-sur-manifestation_31676525.html;)
Protests of the "yellow vests" took place in other cities of France. In Paris, where rallies in the city center were again banned),
protesters staged a march from Champerre to the North Station
(https://www.trt.net.tr/francais/europe/2020/02/23/france-les-gilets-jaunes-rassembles-pour-l-acte-67-1364535)
In addition to their speeches, the "yellow vests" continue to participate in actions against pension reform. So, on February 20 in Toulouse,
they joined the large march of trade unions
https://actu.fr/occitanie/toulouse_31555/entre-2-700-20-000-manifestants-toulouse-jean-luc-melenchon-present-dans-cortege_31633852.html
https://aitrus.info/node/5411
------------------------------
Message: 8
The trial of seven Russian antifascists accused of terrorist offences ended today in Penza, western Russia. ---- Dmitry Pchelintsev recieved
18 years,Ilya Shakursky 16 years, Arman Sagynbaev 6 years,Andrei Chernov 14 years, Vasily Kuksov 9 years, Mikhail Kulkov 10 years and Maxim
Ivankin 13 years imprisonment. ---- The Network case has begun in October 2017, when the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) arrested six
people in Penza accusing them of participation in a terrorist organisation "The Network". Two other Penza residents disappeared and were put
on the wanted list by the FSB. They were subsequently detained in Moscow. In January 2018, two more people were arrested in the same case,
and, in April that year, charges were brought against one more person.
According to the prosecution, the "anarchist terrorist community" was set up in May 2015. After the group's formation, the defendants
allegedly "assigned roles among themselves and explored ways of committing crimes" in order to overthrow the Russian regime by "establishing
combat groups and recruiting individuals who shared their anarchist ideology." They were also accused of intending to use bombs to trigger
"destabilisation of the political climate in the country" during the Russian presidential elections in March 2018 and the football World Cup
held in the country in July that year.
Throughout the trial, the defendants dened the charges and complained about mistreatment including torture by electric shock and beating
during their detention.
Today's court verdict was delivered amid protests outside the court. After the verdict was announced, the court audience responded with
shouts "Shame!" And "Freedom!".
http://derryanarchists.blogspot.com/2020/02/russian-antifascists-sentenced-to-6-18.html
------------------------------
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