鈥淯njust but not unexpected鈥 is how Suzi Weissman, spokesperson for the Boris Kagarlitsky International Solidarity Campaign, described the June 5 decision of a Russian court to reject Boris Kagarlitsky鈥檚 appeal against a five-year jail term for 鈥渏ustifying terrorism鈥.
The court also maintained the ban preventing the well-known Marxist sociologist and anti-war activist from managing internet sites and telecommunications channels for two years from the end of his prison sentence.
Weissman said: 鈥淭he judges鈥 draconian decision was no great surprise since all recent appeals against sentences brought down under Russia鈥檚 catch-all anti-terrorism legislation have been rejected.鈥
The charge of 鈥渏ustifying terrorism鈥, which has been widely used against anti-war activists in the Russian Federation, was brought against Kagarlitsky on July 25 last year after he made some ironical remarks on the occasion of the Ukrainian Navy鈥檚 July 17 attack on the bridge connecting Crimea to Russia.
The decision of the body hearing Kagarlitsky鈥檚 appeal (the Judicial Collegium for Military Personnel of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation) means that he will now remain confined in a penal settlement in Torzhok (Tver region).
Kagarlitsky鈥檚 lawyer, Sergey Erokhov, has already stated on his Telegram channel (June 5) that he will continue with the appeal process, taking the case to higher instances of the Russian legal system, starting with the Praesidium of the Supreme Court and going as far as the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation.
International appeal ignored
The appeals court judges refused to budge on Kagarlitsky鈥檚 sentence despite a special appeal from 37 internationally prominent progressive political figures and intellectuals, including Yanis Varoufakis, Jeremy Corbyn and Jean-Luc M茅lenchon, as well as ministers in the Spanish government and MPs from France, Portugal, Ireland, Belgium and Brazil.
The signatories emphasised that Kagarlitsky has never advocated terrorist methods to reach political objectives and that keeping him in jail would tarnish Russia鈥檚 international reputation.
Since his jailing Kagarlitsky has also received offers of university postings in Brazil and South Africa, while the ongoing petition demanding his release has attracted more than 18,000 signatures to date.
Increasing repression
The court rejected the two main arguments of Kagarlitsky鈥檚 defence formulated by lawyer Erekhov, namely: 鈥(1) it is impossible to judge a social scientist 鈥 for his professional activities and (2) punishment must be fair, i.e. it must correspond to the nature of a crime, the degree of danger it entails for the public and the circumstances in which it is committed.鈥
For Weissman, the judges鈥 鈥渂arbarous鈥 decision to ignore such basic legal criteria reflects the determination of the Vladimir Putin regime to crush domestic opposition to its war on Ukraine.
鈥淚n this context the basic democratic and legal rights of anti-war activists like Boris Kagarlitsky and thousands of others count for very little.
鈥淯pholding Boris鈥檚 appeal would have set a very bad precedent for the Kremlin: if his argument had been accepted, why not that of everyone else condemned for 鈥榡ustifying terrorism鈥?鈥
Weissman concluded that Kagarlitsky has become a 鈥渃ourageous champion of peace and symbol of the struggle for the right to freedom of expression, who has been the victim of a gross but entirely deliberate miscarriage of justice鈥.
The Boris Kagarlitsky International Solidarity Campaign will now redouble its efforts for his release. Details of a new round of initiatives will be announced soon.