http://www.times.spb.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=28075
Murders of Lawyer, Journalist Slammed as 'Political Killings'
By Sergey Chernov
Staff Writer
More than 150 people gathered in central St. Petersburg on Tuesday to
mourn lawyer Stanislav Markelov and journalist Anastasia Baburova, who
were murdered in Moscow on Monday, and protest against political killings.
Markelov was known for taking on human rights cases and defending
left-wing and anti-Nazi activists, while Baburova was also an anarchist
and anti-Nazi activist, so a plan for mourners to gather by Bukvoyed
book store on Ligovsky Prospekt was quickly hatched on leftist and
activist e-mail and Internet forums late Monday, just hours after the
two were murdered.
The site near the book store was chosen because anti-Nazi activist and
musician Timur Kacharava was stabbed to death there by a group of
neo-Nazis in 2005. Vigils are held there every Nov. 13 to commemorate
the day Kacharava was killed.
From there, mourners planned to march to Marsovo Pole (the Field of
Mars), the park where victims of the 1917 Russian revolutions and Civil
War are buried, and hold a vigil near the eternal flame monument.
Although information about the event was distributed only via the
Internet and word of mouth, dozens of mourners turned up, from young
punks, anarchists and left-wing activists to older human rights
activists and sympathizers.
By the announced time of 7 p.m. the police were already on the site,
with several police vehicles parked next to Bukvoyed. Three young people
were reportedly detained at an early point in the gathering.
People held flowers, candles and portraits of Markelov and Baburova at
the site. But when the mourners tried to move toward Nevsky Prospekt,
the city’s main street, at 7:25 p.m, they were blocked by policemen. A
policeman with a megaphone warned the mourners that they were blocking
the movement of pedestrians on Ligovsky Prospekt and demanded that they
leave the site “one by one” and go home.
Some protesters replied that it was the police themselves who were
blocking the movement of pedestrians. The policemen formed lines on both
sides of the gathering, ready to act.
However, after 15 minutes of negotiations, mourners were allowed by a
police colonel in command to walk along the side streets to Marsovo Pole
rather than along Nevsky. They were allowed to carry flowers, but not
candles or portraits. An estimated 65 people walked, accompanied by four
police vehicles, to Marsovo Pole, while some used city buses to get to
the site. Some activists distributed leaflets as they walked.
The mourners arrived at the eternal flame at 8:20 p.m., where some 40
people were already present. The mourners stood silently around the
flame, holding photographs, flowers and candles, until Vladimir
Plotnikov of the left-wing group Rabocheye Deistviye (Workers’ Action)
made a speech describing the killings as “state terror” against
left-wing activists.
According to Plotnikov, the killings were a continuation of the attacks
on newspaper editor Mikhail Beketov and left-wing activist Carine
Clement in Moscow and Ford Plant trade union leader Alexei Etmanov in
St. Petersburg in November.
“We were saying, ‘They will start killing us soon’ then, but with a
laugh, disbelieving -- but now they really are killing us,” he said,
before declaring a minute’s silence in remembrance of Markelov and Baburova.
Later in the evening, around 10 p.m., between 20 and 25 punks and
anarchists marched under a black flag from Sennaya Ploshchad to Marsovo
Pole in protest against the murders, according to the Indymedia
anarchist website. The police were not aware of the march and did not
intervene in the protest.
Moscow prosecutors, who are yet to make any arrests or offer a concrete
motive in the double killing, on Wednesday questioned colleagues and
searched offices that Markelov had used, the Associated Press reported.
Moscow police chief Vladimir Pronin told a news conference Wednesday
that the authorities had little evidence.
“All the investigation has to go on is the data from video cameras,”
Pronin said, Interfax reported.
The killings were condemned by international rights organizations.
“Freedom House is outraged by these cold-blooded murders which reflect
the impunity that exists in Russia today,” said Jennifer Windsor,
Freedom House executive director, in a statement issued on Wednesday.
“Responsible critics of the government appear to be fair game for
contract assassins in a political climate in which Russian authorities
have abdicated their responsibilities for protecting these important
voices.”
The Russian Foreign Ministry reacted by saying that Baburova was an
“innocent victim of the situation,” while, according to the latest
information, it was Markelov who was targeted, ITAR-TASS reported on
Thursday.
“The tragic events connected with the death of a journalist are starting
to get artificially politicized and used, with dishonest intentions, to
discredit Russia and adjusted to the previously developed concept of the
lack of freedom of the press in the Russian Federation [and the]
persecution of journalists,” an unnamed Foreign Ministry official was
quoted by the agency as saying.
Neither Russian President Dmitry Medvedev or Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin have commented publicly on the killings.
--
Dan Clore
My collected fiction, _The Unspeakable and Others_:
http://tinyurl.com/2gcoqt
Lord Weÿrdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://tinyurl.com/292yz9
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
Strange pleasures are known to him who flaunts the
immarcescible purple of poetry before the color-blind.
-- Clark Ashton Smith, "Epigrams and Apothegms"