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  • Support Picket Overrun by Intolerance Mongers and Photo-Op Seekers

    MOSNEWS, Russia
    June 4 2005

    Support Picket Overrun by Intolerance Mongers and Photo-Op Seekers

    Anastasiya Lebedev
    MosNews


    At the picket in support of Alexandra Ivannikova, people held signs
    saying that Alexandra did the right thing, that courts are corrupted,
    and that people have a right to self-defense. At a support meeting,
    that was to be expected. Also there were party banners, party armbands,
    and nationalist speeches. Unfortunately, in contemporary Russia,
    that was also to be expected.

    On Thursday, June 2, a Moscow court convicted Ivannikova of voluntary
    manslaughter (killing in the heat of passion) of Sergey Bagdasarian,
    a gypsy cab driver who had tried to rape her in December 2003. She
    was given a two-year suspended sentence and ordered to pay 206
    thousand rubles (approx. $7360) to the family of the deceased.
    Ivannikova's lawyer's efforts to have the woman's actions re-classified
    as self-defense failed. The court session was closed by plaintiffs'
    (the family of the deceased) request. On June 3, a picket in the
    center of Moscow was held to protest the sentence.

    The picket, as most recent pickets and rallies, became a political
    soiree of sorts. All the regulars of Russian street politics dropped
    in to say a word, hold a sign, wave a flag, or get some attention
    by pointing out how their particular movement or party would fight
    for the prevention of such cases. Ultra-nationalist LDPR Youth,
    nationalist Rodina youth, pro-regime Eurasian Youth Movement all flew
    their standards, while their liberal counterparts from Yabloko youth
    chose not to display party affiliation, but were there as a team and
    a statement anyway.

    Other movements who'd been following Ivannikova's case included DPNI
    (Movement Against Illegal Immigrants) and groups arguing for the
    right to bear arms. DPNI, which likes to blame ethnic non-Russians
    for all that goes wrong in the motherland, has been hot and heavy on
    the case because Bagdasarian was an ethnic Armenian.

    The majority of the picketers looked rather lost - they were quite good
    at posing for press and amateur photographers abundant at the event,
    but other than chanting discordantly and half-heartedly "Fair trial
    for an honest person" and "Acquit Ivannikova," they weren't quite
    sure what to do. When asked how they learned about Ivannikova's case,
    most responded that they had learned about it online. Ivannikova's
    lawyer, who blogged about the case throughout the trial, was the one
    to initially attract attention to the case. Because the trial was
    closed - no press or public admitted - his story is what Ivannikova's
    supporters go on. They believe that the court was either pressured
    or paid off by Bagdasarian's family. The picket livened up when
    ultra-nationalists got up to speak.

    Radical nationalists have been making ethnicity a central issue
    in the case. Alexander Belov from DPNI barked on and on about the
    right of all women to carry knives, about Russian women being raped,
    and Russia being "our" country. Aleksey, another DPNI member in the
    picketing crowd, first stated that the movement would have exactly
    the same position had the young woman been threatened by an ethnic
    Russian, then added: "The national aspect is important. You-know-how
    come here and rape."

    Their speeches definitely appealed to the few seniors who had come
    after hearing an announcement on Narodnoye, or People's Radio, as
    they had explained. An elderly couple who introduced themselves as
    Pyotr and Adelaida said they'd come to the "protest the stranglehold
    of the foreign-born. Yes, the stranglehold of the foreign-born. And to
    support Ivannikova, but most importantly, to protest the stranglehold
    of the foreign-born."

    Looking at the party reps wrapped in banners, Nikolay, a picketer
    who's in a youth political movement but who came privately, said,
    "I believe that this is publicity that exploits someone's misfortune."
    Natalya Kholmogorova, one of the picket's organizers, disagreed: "This
    is a necessary evil. Political activists will publicize themselves
    by the means of this case, but if they manage to help Alexandra,
    that's good." Andrei, another independent picketer who came to
    express his stance on self-defense and punishment for rape (which he
    believes should be death), said, shaking his head, as Belov ranted:
    "I didn't expect overt fascism."

    After Belov's tirades, more moderate speakers stepped up, demanding
    the acquittal of Ivannikova and even an award for her courageous
    self-defense. However, the liberal party picketers left after the DPNI
    address, unwilling to appear to be supporting the ultra-nationalist
    position. A while later, the picket drifted apart as activists folded
    up banners and took off armbands. What could have been made into a
    poignant case for self-defense and women's rights was little more than
    a photo-op for Russia's nationalists and a soap-box for intolerance.

    In December 2003, after getting into Bagdasarian's car for a ride
    home, Ivannikova stabbed him in the leg with a kitchen knife which
    she has carried with her since the age of 16, when she had been
    first assaulted. She accidentally ruptured an artery, after which
    Bagdasarian bled to death.
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