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Jurist Russia Supreme Court upholds 12-year imprisonment of transgender anti-war activist

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Dadparvar

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Nov 11, 2016
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Russian Supreme Court upheld the 12-year imprisonment of a transgender anti-war activist Mark Kislitsyn, stated Amnesty International on Wednesday. The group said convicting the activist of high treason for sending US $10 to a Ukrainian bank account “defied common sense,” urging his immediate release.

Natalia Prilutskaya, Amnesty International’s Russia Researcher, reiterated that the real aim of Kislitsyn’s persecution, imprisonment and ill-treatment in detention was not to protect state security, but to “punish a committed human rights defender for his anti-war stance.”

Mark Kislitsyn is a transgender man, anti-war and LGBT activist. He was convicted for transferring $10 to a Ukrainian bank account, which the authorities alleged that the account was opened to raise funds for the Ukrainian army to fight Russia after the “special military operation” against Ukraine.

The Russian authorities regarded Kislitsyn’s actions as high treason under Article 275 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. The article provides that “rendering financial assistance to a foreign state in activities against the security of the Russian Federation” amounts to high treason. The court sentenced Kislitsin in December 2023 to 12 years in a general regime colony with a fine of 200 thousand rubles (approximately $2,300).

The group also contended that Kislitsyn faced ill-treatment after being detained, in particular the denial of gender-affirming hormonal treatment. Kislitsyn is also facing prolonged and unjustified confinement in a punishment cell, predominantly in solitary confinement.

Solitary confinement is regulated by international law. According to Rule 45 of the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, “solitary confinement shall be used only in exceptional cases as a last resort, for as short a time as possible and subject to independent review.”

In a letter written from jail, Mark Kislitsyn said, “[t]hose who are trying to intimidate me… can do me a little harm, but no matter what they do, they cannot make me renounce my beliefs, lose my sense of belonging to my country or even ruin my mood.”

In order to eliminate criticism of the government’s actions, Russia has been using strict laws to regulate the information landscape since the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Restrictive laws used for suppression of opposition, besides the well-known law on “foreign agents,” include some articles of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, such as article 207.3 which prohibits the “public dissemination of knowingly false information about the use of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation.” Article 280.3 also prohibits “discrediting the armed forces of the Russian Federation.”

The post Russia Supreme Court upholds 12-year imprisonment of transgender anti-war activist appeared first on JURIST - News.

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