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Moscow: Nationalists Give Cash to Ivannikova

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  • Moscow: Nationalists Give Cash to Ivannikova

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    July 28 2005

    Nationalists Give Cash to Ivannikova

    By Oksana Yablokova
    Staff Writer

    Alexandra Ivannikova, whose conviction in the killing of a gypsy cab
    driver who she said tried to rape her was recently overturned, has
    received a 50,000-ruble ($1,700) award from an ultranationalist group
    that hailed her actions as an example of bravery.

    In December 2003, Ivannikova, 29, stabbed Sergei Bagdasaryan, 23, an
    ethnic Armenian, in the thigh with a knife after waving down his car
    for a ride. The knife struck Bagdasaryan in an artery, and he was
    dead by the time police arrived at the scene.

    During her trial, Ivannikova received support from human rights
    advocates, who said the trial was a test case on the right to
    self-defense, as well as from nationalist groups, whose campaign
    focused on Bagdasaryan's ethnicity.

    On July 12, Ivannikova was invited to the three-year anniversary
    celebration of the Movement Against Illegal Immigration and awarded
    50,000 rubles ($1,700) in a stack of 100-ruble bills wrapped with a
    ribbon and a bow.

    Ivannikova also received flowers and a long ovation from the
    audience, said Alexander Belov, a spokesman for the group, whose
    Russian acronym is DPNI.

    Belov said that DPNI had supported Ivannikova during her trial and
    that the group's supporters had voluntarily donated money to her.
    They had started collecting money before the end of the trial and
    wanted to give her husband the money so he would have money to pay
    the lawyers, he said.


    "One should not think that we rewarded her for killing an Armenian.
    However, we thought that she deserved an award for having committed
    such a brave act, and she has gone through a lot of suffering," Belov
    said by telephone Wednesday.

    Belov said he was not sure that the DPNI would have supported
    Ivannikova so actively or given her the cash award if she had killed
    a Russian or Slavic man. "I personally might, but I am not sure that
    other people would have been willing to donate so much money," he
    said.

    Through her husband, Ivannikova declined to comment on the award,
    saying that she had grown tired of being interviewed by the media in
    recent weeks.

    Ivannikova's lawyer Alexei Parshin said that she had arrived at the
    DPNI ceremony not knowing that she would receive the award, Izvestia
    newspaper reported Wednesday. Parshin said he did not know she was
    going to the event.

    During the trial, Parshin distanced Ivannikova from the position of
    ultranationalist groups, including DPNI, that rallied in her defense
    outside the court.

    Yevgeny Ikhlov of the For Human Rights group, which also supported
    Ivannikova during her trial, criticized her for accepting the DPNI's
    award.

    "It could be explained if she accepted compensation for her suffering
    from an NGO. But she actually took the reward for murder, not to
    mention who gave her this money," Ikhlov said, adding that Ivannikova
    would most likely be acquitted in a new trial as the City
    Prosecutor's Office has said it would not take part.

    Ivannikova's acceptance of the award "will seriously complicate the
    defense strategy of other people standing trial in similar cases,"
    Ikhlov said.

    Last month, the Lyublinsky District Court found Ivannikova guilty of
    murder and gave her a two-year suspended sentence. District
    prosecutors had sought a three-year prison sentence.

    The Moscow City Prosecutor's Office then intervened and recommended
    that the verdict be reviewed, contradicting the position of the
    prosecutor on the case. On July 4, the Moscow City Court overturned
    Ivannikova's murder conviction on the grounds of self-defense.
    However, the court agreed with a request by Bagdasaryan's father that
    the case be retried.

    Ivannikova's initial conviction was widely criticized by human rights
    advocates, including government ombudsman Vladimir Lukin. The case
    was also discussed on a political talk show on NTV television.
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