Russia

Russia is on track to open more criminal cases for treason in 2023 than over the past 20 years combined, Russia’s independent news website Kholodreported Monday. Authorities launched 82 treason investigations between January and July — a fourfold increase from the 20 cases investigated in all of 2022 — Kholod said, citing publicly available media reports.The actual number of ongoing treason cases is much larger given that some investigations are not made public, according to Russia’s Perviy Otdel human rights project, which specializes in cases under investigation by the Federal Security Service (FSB).“The FSB has picked up its pace [in 2023] — we get 20 criminal cases a month on average,” Perviy Otdel attorney Yevgeny Smirnov told Kholod.

“This means one [treason] case is initiated every work day.”“At this rate, there will have about 250 [treason cases] by the end of December, one for every work day per year,” Smirnov said.For comparison, Russian authorities launched 101 treason cases over the 20-year period between 1997-2017, Kholod writes, citing a 2018 report by thenow-disbanded legal group Team 29.Kholod’s analysis of the existing 82 treason cases says 59 of the defendants are accused of acting in the interests of Ukraine, followed by three accused of working for China, two for the United States and one each for the United Kingdom and Germany.At the same time, Perviy Otdel says defendants in treason cases are increasingly subjected totorture.“They tortured the young, the old and the sick.

We even have information on the torture of witnesses,” Smirnov told Kholod.The geography of treason cases has also expanded, Kholod reports.

For 2023, its analysis lists 17 investigations launched in Moscow — which previously accounted for 90% of all such cases — 51 in 28 other regions, as well as 11 in annexed Crimea and Russian-occupied Ukrainian territories.Treason and espionage cases are held behind closed doors in Russia as they deal with what authorities consider classified information.Espionage charges carry a maximum prison sentence of 20 years.

Amendments that President Vladimir Putin signed into law in April increased the maximum penalty for “high treason” from 20 years to life imprisonment.UN experts on human rights and freedom of expression last monthvoiced alarm over the growing number of treason and espionage arrests in Russia since it invaded Ukraine in early 2022.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues-Publication from Jan 2021


Buy Our Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting



It's Voluntary! Take care of your Family, Friends and People around You First and later think about us. Its Fine if you dont wish to contribute and if you wish to contribute then think about the Homeless first and Feed them. We can survive with your wishes too :-). You can Buy our Merchandise too which are of the finest quality.

Debit/Credit/UPI

UPI/Debit/Credit

Paytm


STRIPE


[Russia] - Russia Says Downed Four U.S. Long-Range Missiles


Russian Military Court Extends Playwright, Director?s Pre-Trial Detention by 6 Months


[Russia] - 'My Moral Compass Demands It': Russian Emigres Rally Alongside Georgians Against 'Foreign Influence' Bill


[Russia] - Moscow Claims Ukraine Lost 111K Troops So Far in 2024


Czech Republic Reports Targeting by Russian Cyberattacks


[Russia] - Kremlin Slams 'Dangerous' Remarks by Macron About Troop Deployment in Ukraine


?Nearly Naked? Party Organizer Ivleeva Says Visited Occupied Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia's FSB Says Killed Ukrainian 'Saboteur' Planning 3 Attacks


Russian Shelling Kills 2 in Eastern Donetsk Region


[Russia] - 2 Injured in Ukrainian Drone Strikes on Russia's Belgorod


[Russia] - Washington Says Russian Soldiers Deployed at Niger Airbase Housing U.S. Military


[Russia] - Germany Blames Russia for 'Intolerable' Cyber Attack on SPD Members


[Russia] - Kyrgyzstan Repeats Russia Travel Warning Over Reported Border Checks


Putin Rumored to Sack Deputy PM Abramchenko After Inauguration ? Vedomosti


In Photos: Georgian Riot Police Clash With Protesters Rallying Against 'Foreign Influence' Bill


Russia Says Captured Another Village in Eastern Ukraine


Russians Returning From Abroad Help Boost Kremlin?s War Economy ? Bloomberg


[Russia] - Russia Seeks 10-Year Jail Term for Wife of Exiled Journalist in Attempted Murder Case


[Russia] - U.S. Accuses Russia of Using Chemical Weapons in Ukraine


Ukrainian Drone Attacks Damage Energy Sites in Western Russia


[Russia] - Russian Missile Attack Injures 13 in Ukraine's Odesa


[Russia] - In Photos: Russia Shows Off Captured Western Military Hardware at Moscow Expo


Russia Says Carried Out Strike on Ukraine?s Southern Command Center


Japan Tobacco Adjusts Supply Chains to Keep Russian Business, CEO Says


EU Condemns Georgia After Police Clash With Protestors in Tbilisi


[Russia] - 2 Killed in Russian Bomb Attack on Kharkiv Region


U.S. Senate Passes Bill Banning Russian Uranium Imports


Ukrainian Drone Strikes Target Russian Oil Refineries ? Reports


[Russia] - Russian Missile Attack Kills 3 in Southern Ukraine's Odesa


Moscow Court Charges 5 Russians With ?Terrorism? Over Helicopter Torching


[Russia] - Russia Says Intercepted U.S.-Supplied ATACMS Missiles Fired From Ukraine


Powerful Dust Storm Rips Through Siberia?s Irkutsk


Russian Strikes Kill Railway Worker in Ukraine's Kharkiv


River Levels in Western Siberia Set to Peak Later Than Forecast Due to ?Abnormal? Flooding


Russian Philosopher Dugin Rails Against Western Liberalism in Tucker Carlson Interview


Russian City Official Arrested in Occupied Ukraine on Embezzlement Charges


[Russia] - Property Manager in Siberia Apologies for Painting Curbside in Ukrainian Flag Colors


Ex-NSA Employee Who Tried Spying for Russia Sentenced to 21 Years in Prison


Death Toll in Russian Missile Strike on Odesa Rises to 5





66