Issue #1749 (8), Wednesday, March 6, 2013 | Archive
 
 
Follow sptimesonline on Facebook Follow sptimesonline on Twitter Follow sptimesonline on RSS Follow sptimesonline on Livejournal Follow sptimesonline on Vkontakte

Ïåðåâåñòè íà ðóññêèé Ïåðåâåñòè íà ðóññêèé Print this article Print this article

St. Pete Activists Questioned in Bolotnoye Case

Published: March 11, 2013 (Issue # 1749)


Investigators questioned two prominent opposition activists from St. Petersburg last Wednesday as part of a criminal investigation into violence at an anti-Kremlin demonstration on Moscow's Bolotnaya Ploshchad last year.

Police raided the homes of Andrei Pivovarov, head of the liberal Republican Party – Party of People's Freedom's local branch, and Natasha Gryaznevich, an activist with the Civil Responsibility movement, at about 7 a.m. before summoning them to the Interior Ministry's extremism center in the northern capital, local media reported.

The searches represent the first time that investigators have targeted activists from St. Petersburg in their inquiry into violent clashes between riot police and demonstrators on May 6.

Opposition activists claim that police provoked the clashes, a version supported by the majority of the Kremlin's human rights council, while investigators blame protesters and have classified the protest as a “mass riot.” Twenty-one activists are currently facing criminal prosecution in the so-called Bolotnoye case, which has provoked outrage in opposition circles.

In comments on Twitter, Pivovarov said he was questioned as a witness, rather than a suspect, in the case and told Ekho Peterburga radio that investigators failed to find anything linked to the now-infamous protest in his flat. It was not immediately clear whether Gryaznevich was also being treated as a witness.

By midday Wednesday, opposition activists gathered outside the police's extremism center to express support for their colleagues by holding one-man pickets, a form of public gathering that doesn't require permission from authorities.

Addressing St. Petersburg's Legislative Assembly, local lawmaker Maxim Reznik, former head of Yabloko's St. Petersburg branch and now loosely affiliated with Mikhail Prokhorov's Civil Platform party, said the investigation into Pivovarov and Gryaznevich should be monitored by the assembly.

Pivovarov, who sits on the opposition's Coordination Council, a body tasked with formulating opposition tactics, wrote on Twitter that the search at his home was conducted by Major Timofei Grachyov, a senior Investigative Committee official known for overseeing prior investigations into anti-Kremlin protesters.

In October, Grachyov caused a stir by reportedly threatening “anti-fascist” activist Filipp Galtsov into giving testimony against Left Front leader Sergei Udaltsov and his associate, Leonid Razvozzhayev, both of whom are accused of plotting the protest violence as part of a wider plan to sow discord in Russia.

Razvozzhayev later claimed that he was tortured after being taken to a pretrial detention center by Grachyov.

Pivovarov and Gryaznevich both attended the “March of Millions” demonstration on Bolotnaya Ploshchad and organized transportation to the event for like-minded St. Petersburg residents. But Pivovarov denied that they had broken the law during the rally, at which more than 400 protesters were detained.

According to St. Petersburg-based news portal Fontanka.ru, the pair also took part in a seminar near Vilnius, Lithuania, that featured in a documentary-style film broadcast on state-controlled channel NTV that accused opposition activists of plotting riots on Russian soil with financing from Georgian politician Givi Targamadze.

After leaving the extremism center early Wednesday afternoon, Pivovarov told journalists that he had signed a non-disclosure agreement, which prevented him from revealing any specifics about investigators' line of questioning.

Gryaznevich was not immediately available for comment.


Something to say? Write to the Opinion Page Editor.
  Click to open the form.

E-mail or online form:

If you are willing for your comment to be published as a letter to the editor, please supply your first name, last name and the city and country where you live.

Your email:

Little about you:

SUBMIT OPINION




 
MOST READ

It is a little known fact outside St. Petersburg that a whole army of cats has been protecting the unique exhibits at the State Hermitage Museum since the early 18th century. The cats’ chief enemies are the rodents that can do more harm to the museum’s holdings than even the most determined human vandal.Hermitage Cats Save the Day
Ida-Viru County, or Ida-Virumaa, a northeastern and somewhat overlooked part of this small yet extremely diverse Baltic country, can be an exciting adventure, even if the northern spring is late to arrive. And it is closer to St. Petersburg than the nearest Finnish city of Lappeenranta (163 km vs. 207 km), thus making it an even closer gateway to the European Union.Exploring Northeastern Estonia
A group of St. Petersburg politicians, led by Vitaly Milonov, the United Russia lawmaker at the St. Petersburg Legislative Assembly and the godfather of the infamous law against gay propaganda, has launched a crusade against a three-day exhibition by the British artist Adele Morse that is due to open at Geometria Cafe today.Artist’s Stuffed Fox Exercises Local Politicians
It’s lonely at the top. For a business executive, the higher up the corporate ladder you climb and the more critical your decisions become, the less likely you are to receive honest feedback and support.Executive Coaching For a Successful Career
Finns used to say that the best sight in Stockholm was the 6 p.m. boat leaving for Helsinki. By the same token, it could be said today that the best sight in Finland is the Allegro leaving Helsinki station every morning at 9 a.m., bound for St. Petersburg.Cross-Border Understanding and Partnerships
Nine protesters were detained at a Strategy 31 demo for the right of assembly Sunday as a new local law imposing further restrictions on the rallies in St. Petersburg, signed by Governor Poltavchenko on March 19, came into force in the city.Demonstrators Flout New Law