“I now have mixed feelings about this trial. On the one hand, we expect a guilty verdict. Compared to the judicial machine, we are nobodies, and we have lost. On the other hand, we have won. The whole world now sees that the criminal case against us has been fabricated. The system cannot conceal the repressive nature of this trial.” - Yekaterina Samutsevich, Pussy Riot.


On February 21, 2012, just two weeks before the presidential elections, the Russian punk band and performance art group Pussy Riot performed ‘Punk worship’ Mother of God, Drive Putin Out. This politically controversial song was made all the more provocative by being performed in the Christ the Savior Cathedral one of the holiest in Russian Orthodoxy.

These events led to police opening a criminal file on 26 February and in early March the band members were arrested. This was followed by a prosecution for the crime of hooliganism – the verdict is due tomorrow.

The accused have sought to link their trial to the Stalinist Show Trials of the 1930’s; such claims should not be accepted at face value.

It can be relatively undisputed that the act of performing Mother of God, Drive Putin Out in a Cathedral of such significance was designed to provoke. It was intended to offend at some level – just as The Sex Pistols attempts to play God Save the Queen on 7 June 1977, the day of the Queen’s silver jubilee celebrations, outside the Palace at Westminster. So punks being provocative is nothing new, but is it a crime?

Hooliganism is defined by Russia’s Criminal Code as “the flagrant violation of public order expressed by a clear disrespect for society committed a) with a weapon; b) for reasons of politics, ideology, racism, nationalism, religious hatred, or enmity with respect to any social group. Pussy Riot have been charged under Russia’s Criminal Code of 1996, Article 213 (2) – this covers the offence of hooliganism committed by a group of persons acting on the basis of prior agreement. Under the Criminal Code the maximum penalty for crime of hooliganism is imprisonment for up to seven year though not-custodial sanctions are available (such as serious fines and community work for a period of up to five years).

The decision to pursue a criminal prosecution was not inevitable. Prosecutors could have opted for an Administrative charge under Article 5.26 (2) of the Administrative Offences Code (insulting the religious feelings of citizens or defiling revered items, signs and world-view symbols) or under Article 20.1 (minor hooliganism or disordered conduct). The Administrative Offences attract far lesser sentences - the choice is the equivalent of the Australian distinction between summary and indictable offences.

The second controversial issue in these trials is that the Court has rejected virtually every application made by the defence. Even if we accept that all of these claims were without merit – denying every application in such a high profile and controversial case evokes the memory of “telephone justice”. This Soviet era concept refers to the practice of courts being controlled by the executive.

However, the invocation of Stalin’s Moscow Trials and “telephone law” is somewhat lazy. In truth the Pussy Riot trial is a classic example of the criminal trial as theatre. That concept is not new to Russia; nor is it unique to that state. After all, the trial of Ned Kelly spawned a national icon of dubious repute.

In 1878 Vera Zasulich was charged with attempting to assassinate General Fyodor Trepov, the military governor of St. Petersburg. She had, in fact, shot and wounded General Trepov. She did this because the General had previously ordered the brutal whipping of a prisoner. Zasulich was hailed as a martyr for justice.

As in the case of Pussy Riot, prosecutors sought to make a public example of the Zasulich. However, Zasulich’s defence counsel sought to place her criminal actions within their political context.

They argued that “what was considered a crime yesterday, becomes a glorious deed of civil valor today or tomorrow. A crime against the state is often the expression of a doctrine aiming at premature reforms…”. The jury acquitted. Perhaps unsurprisingly Tsar Alexander II quickly abandoned his reforming tendencies.

As with the trial of Zasulich the defence of Pussy Riot has not sought to deny their actions – given that video of their act is available online that would have been pointless. Instead they have sought to place their actions within a political context.

Thus Samutsevich denies any intentions to hurt religious feelings of the Russian Orthodox Church adherents and argues that the actions were directed rather against an overly politicized branch of the Church. That the Christ the Saviour Cathedral “had become a significant symbol in the political strategy of the authorities” thereby making it a political and not a religious target. Their defence is the political point they were making in the first place. The trial is an extension of the political.

If the prosecutor had pursued the more obvious line of an administrative charge the legal system could have legitimately denounced the actions of Pussy Riot without attracting the attention of Madonna and the world’s media. This is significant because as of late March opinion poll data reveals that nearly half of Russians were unaware of the incident. The criminal prosecution has made Pussy Riot infamous.

Perhaps the Kremlin wishes that the prosecutors had adopted such an approach. Perhaps. But in the end Pussy Riot have benefitted from unimagined publicity. And the authorities will have reassured their conservative core.

All criminal trials are about much more than declarations of guilt or innocence. They are about a process of public justification and often they are about public spectacle; theatre. That is all the more true when lycra clad punks are involved. This trial is about much more than what happens in the courtroom.

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    • AdamC says:

      11:48am | 16/08/12

      Obviously, Pussy Riot have become the darlings of many Westerners, who want to live vicariously through actual dissidents who are actually being (at least allegedly) persecuted. Having said that, they are not the best pin-ups for freedom of conscience. Presumably their Cathedral antics would have been unlawful in most parts of the world?

    • Oliver says:

      12:27pm | 16/08/12

      They were trying to highlight Putin’s relationship with the church in his maintenance of power. While the church and state are officially separate, their cozy relationship meant one came to the aid of the other. The state made their protest a crime even though there were no preconditions for it to be classed as one.

    • St. Michael says:

      12:35pm | 16/08/12

      Even so, there are crimes and there are Crimes - that’s a point made well by the article in that there were a number of different offences the Pussies could have been charged with, but the authorities chose the most serious one for what sounds like solely political reasons rather than a cool assessment of the actual seriousness of the crime and finding an offence to meet it.

      Similar things have been done in “civilised” countries like the UK, home to the Westminister system, not to mention the adversarial system of justice.  Google “ABC trial” - there, a piece of anti-espionage legislation which was designed to assist in convicting major criminals like the Atom Spies was used against a journalist for gathering information that was all present in the public domain.

      Of course, the difference between the ABC trial and this one is that the ABC trial had the benefit of a fiercely independent judge who owed no allegiance to and who didn’t care about what the British security authorities or the government of the day wanted.  His only allegiance was to the rule of law, and he all but thundered at the British prosecutors that they were misusing a piece of legislation for purposes it had not been intended for.  The ABC defendants were convicted, but not for espionage which would have carried 20 years’ imprisonment.

      That judicial (and to a lesser extent prosecutorial) independence, to a large extent, still remains in court systems founded on the Westminster system.  Without that courageous independence and fidelity to the rule of law, you would not have seen Julia Gillard—a lawyer herself who should know better—railing against the High Court for striking down the Malaysia Solution.

      All court is theatre (why else does a lawyer say he ‘acts’ for his client), but it’s only in oppressive regimes that it becomes a show trial.

      Sometimes we take our judicial systems entirely for granted.

    • gobsmack says:

      12:39pm | 16/08/12

      Lol.

      Conservatives become seriously conflicted when a group of leftists are pushing the boundaries of free speech.

      You’ve tried to have a bob each way.

    • St. Michael says:

      01:43pm | 16/08/12

      Even so, there are crimes and there are Crimes - that’s a point made well by the article in that there were a number of different offences the band could have been charged with, but the authorities chose the most serious one for what sounds like solely political reasons rather than a cool assessment of the actual seriousness of the crime and finding an offence to meet it.

      Similar things have been done in “civilised” countries like the UK, home to the Westminister system, not to mention the adversarial system of justice.  Google “ABC trial” - there, a piece of anti-espionage legislation which was designed to assist in convicting major criminals like the Atom Spies was used against a journalist for gathering information that was all present in the public domain.

      Of course, the difference between the ABC trial and this one is that the ABC trial had the benefit of a fiercely independent judge who owed no allegiance to and who didn’t care about what the British security authorities or the government of the day wanted.  His only allegiance was to the rule of law, and he all but thundered at the British prosecutors that they were misusing a piece of legislation for purposes it had not been intended for.  The ABC defendants were convicted, but not for espionage which would have carried 20 years’ imprisonment.

      That judicial (and to a lesser extent prosecutorial) independence, to a large extent, still remains in court systems founded on the Westminster system.  Without that courageous independence and fidelity to the rule of law, you would not have seen Julia Gillard—a lawyer herself who should know better—railing against the High Court for striking down the Malaysia Solution.

      All court is theatre (why else does a lawyer say he ‘acts’ for his client), but it’s only in oppressive regimes that it becomes a show trial.

      Sometimes we take our judicial systems entirely for granted.

    • AdamC says:

      02:10pm | 16/08/12

      @gobsmack, er, no. Try again.

      The fact is, putting on an unauthorised concert in someone else’s Cathedral would likely see you charged with something just about anywhere. (Tresspass, at the very least.) You push the boundaries of free speech with provocative ideas, not with illegal stunts that have little to do with the message itself.

      Having said that, I would be quite happy for lefties to rediscover free speech, at least in Australia. Based on recent events, however, there seems little prospect of that happening.

      @St Michael, good points. I actually do not disagree with anything you have said. My point is that, as far as martyrs for pluralism in Russia go, these girls are pretty underwhelming.

    • St. Michael says:

      02:56pm | 16/08/12

      Gah, double post.  Apologies all round.  I thought the first version had disappeared because of the use of the word “Pussies”, for which I’m very fcuking sorry.

    • Mack says:

      12:21pm | 16/08/12

      Pussy riot are rightly in prison for they are simply a tool of international finance and liberalism to undermine the Russian state.

      Similarly, the recent Teddybear “free speech now” air drop in Belarus by the Swedish is a similar attempt to undermine a state not yet under the yoke of liberalism.

      Heaven forbid countries don’t want their nation controlled by bankers or have their culture destroyed and replaced with soulless mouthpieces of progressive “culture” such as Madonna, Gaga and Pussy Riot.

      No wonder Iran wants nukes, look what happens if you don’t have them.

    • Tubesteak says:

      12:51pm | 16/08/12

      Now *that’s* comedy

    • Oliver says:

      01:02pm | 16/08/12

      Your trolling abilities are outstanding sir!

    • Mack says:

      01:30pm | 16/08/12

      Yes, brush off my comments so flippantly.

      Equivalent to feminists going “Wow, just wow”.

    • gobsmack says:

      01:49pm | 16/08/12

      When Madonna joins your side, you know you’re fighting a lost cause.

      I’m waiting for Bono to make an appearance.  He can use his status as a “world leader” to have a quiet word with Putin.

    • Tubesteak says:

      03:00pm | 16/08/12

      To hell with Madge and Bono. We need Team America!

      They’ll save us from these liberalist bankers and their desire to create a free society controlled by financial deregulation and shackle us to loans while they’re in league with reverse vampires and the RAND corporation and the saucer people all in order to eliminate the meal of dinner-time.

      We’re through the looking glass here, people

    • John says:

      04:09pm | 16/08/12

      That’s pretty much what’s going on in Russia. The Vultures (International Banking Cartel came to devour the corpse of mother Russia as it collapsed, Putin came along basically spoiled their feast and incarcerated the Vultures and caused them to flee to their Vulture base’s over the world.

      If one looks at Vulture base’s, practically the entire west now, constantly attack Putin for not letting them eat up mother Russia. Putin, knows that they want to control russia, this why they keep on funding these opposite groups in russia to try and overthrow him and the vultures practical own the western media, this explains their constant attacks. They are hungry, and obsessed with devouring mother russia.  They will go after china and the entire world. Every citizen on this planet will be the property of the vultures if they allowed to do as they please.

    • AwfulMusic says:

      12:27pm | 16/08/12

      I don’t understand Russian but that song sounds awful.

    • Mrs Slocombe says:

      12:31pm | 16/08/12

      I don’t want my pussy getting any ideas about rioting

    • Mr Humphries says:

      01:51pm | 16/08/12

      Be ready with the baton.

    • MarkS says:

      12:53pm | 16/08/12

      It is how protest is handled that tells you if you live in a dictatorship or not. If a punk band had done the same in St Mary’s to protest against Howard. No doubt they would have been arrested. A small fine is the most likely result.

      Serious criminal charges leading to perhaps seven years jail in a public show trial. It is a show trail, regardless of if the authorities wished it to be or not, the fact that it has become an international spectacle makes it one.

      It is this sort of overreaction that tells you what sort of society you are dealing with. The emperor will punish you if you point out he has no clothes.

    • Pavlo says:

      12:56pm | 16/08/12

      Wow good thing they have nice T&A, because their music is below woeful. This would be my message to them: You go and dance in a church as a protest, breaking your country’s laws in the process. Then you whinge that you are being treated unfairly. Duh.
      Predictable.  All done as a cheap publicity stunt for your SH*% music. I note that you made sure you had a stooge in the pews filming it all.

      Get a job you bums.

    • stephen says:

      01:25pm | 16/08/12

      Wow, Ned Kelly killed people.  Music didnt cause such physical harm last time I checked. What points are you trying to join exactly, as I am having trouble linking our Ned the murderer with a girl punk band.

      In fact its insulting to our intelligence to write this garbage.

      Mabye you could have started with something like this

      Ordinary Russians are not too fussed on having 3 young girls locked up for 7 years for their crimes.

      I think the root cause of this issue, that isn’t in your article, is that there is a cosy relationship between the conservative Orthodox Church heirachy and the regime.

      Over 60% of Russians polled believe a small or zero punishment is appropriate if I read this right last week.  So the issue is really one of the authorities gunning for 7 years & a public airing of hamfisted criminal trial methods more suited to the 1970’s.

    • Fergal Davis says:

      02:52pm | 16/08/12

      Hi,
      thanks for taking the time to read and comment on our article - we appreciate your feedback.

      Personally, I think many of you are correct when you note that some “crime” has been committed here. Indeed our reading of the law of Russia supports that view but, like many of you, I would question whether the “offence” justifies a criminal charge which can attract up to 7 years in prison and the prosecutor seeking 3 years. It seems the Administrative Law option would have been more proportionate - acknowledging the offence casued but not seeking to overly impede the right to protest.

      @Stephen - I am sorry if I insulted your intelligence. I certainly didn’t mean to. The Ned Kelly point was simply meant to illustrate that a trial can contribute to someone’s cultural significance. The contemporary reporting on the Kelly trial surely contributed to his ongoing notoriety <http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/60622639>. Like Zasulich in nineteenth century Russia; or Robert Emmet in Ireland. We were not intending to suggest an equivalence between the crimes of Kelly and those of Pussy Riot.

      On your other point, the root cause. You are of course correct. As we said:
      “Samutsevich ... argues that the actions were directed ...against an overly politicized branch of the Church.”

      But perhaps we should have made that clearer. Thanks again.

    • Your Opinion says:

      07:57pm | 16/08/12

      It seems completely justified to me.  There was nothing, but an intention to be highly offensive to the Church.  They knew the law.  They broke it.  They get what they deserve.  Too many hand wringing lefties telling the rest of society it’s okay to break the law.  You would be arrested here in Australia for similar behaviour.  The Russians just do it better.

    • MarkS says:

      09:09am | 17/08/12

      @Your Opinion
      You would be arrested in Australia. But you would not be charged under say Terrorism laws. Your opinion is dangerous. No doubt you would welcome Big Brother.

      The laws they are using would be better used for people who break into a church, smash the windows & write foul slogans. Misusing it for some bad music shows what sort of regime Russia has.

    • Oliver says:

      02:59pm | 16/08/12

      A quote from Wikipedia’s reference to the relationship between the Russian state and Orthodox church:

      “This close alliance between the government and the Russian Orthodox Church has become a defining characteristic of Mr. Putin’s tenure, a mutually reinforcing choreography that is usually described here as working “in symphony’”

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Orthodox_Church#cite_note-54

    • Tony says:

      10:48pm | 16/08/12

      Their music is so bad they probably deserve some gaol time. At least the Sex Pistols had Steve Jones and Paul Cook to hold the songs together - getting any rhythm out of these chicks would be like herding cats.

    • stephen says:

      08:40pm | 18/08/12

      2 years for civil disobedience?

      The defence team were not able to present evidence.  The judge said they had no rights only obligations.

      The prosecution went through 3 expert psychologists before finding the right one.

      The church now wants the Dear Leader to bestow his gracious benevolence   by shortening the sentence.

      Very sad.

    • Graeme says:

      03:39pm | 19/08/12

      Thanks to the twin Doctors:  I knew ‘hooligan’ was a term thrown by communist leaders against opponents, and often wondered how a word rooted in late 19th cent English stereotypes of Irish (‘Houlihan’ or ‘Hooley’s Gang’ are rival etymologies) headed East so quickly and took legal roots. 

      The offence you describe sounds like affray (if with weapon), or a breach of the peace with some expressive element offensive to the State or majority.  The latter element of the offense is what offends liberals.

    • Fergal Davis says:

      07:13pm | 19/08/12

      Very Sad indeed. Though predicted by many.

      This was clearly a breach of the peace and should have been prosecuted accordingly - under the Administrative NOT the Criminal law. That’s the point we were making really. The reaction was disproportionate.

      @Graeme - as an Irishman who spent 10 years living in Manchester (UK) having to listen to people use the word “paddy” to mean a “fight” or “disagreement” I have given up on tracing the etymology of phrases related to Ireland.

      Once again, thanks for reading and commenting. Feedback is so rare for an academic that it is exciting to engage.

 

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