RA’s Daily Russia News Blast – Nov 21, 2013
TODAY: Putin meets with non-parliamentary oppositions, speaks out against homophobia; Bolotnaya Square detentions extended, further Greenpeace activists released; Alyokhina to file appeal; FSB ‘practicing’ for Olympic terror screening; lawyers protest courts’ merge; Baumgertner to be extradited.
For the first time since coming to power, President Vladimir Putin met with his non-parliamentary opposition to discuss topics for his yearly state-of-the-nation speech next month – including the motion to announce a broad amnesty of ‘political prisoners’. Putin promised to study Vladimir Ryzhkov’s list of 70 such prisoners, cautioning, ‘[W]e cannot create a nervous atmosphere in society that tomorrow some criminals will be freed.’ Putin has called for an easing of the ‘torrid of hatred’ directed against Russia’s LGBT community (‘people of non-traditional sexual orientation’). Seven more Greenpeace activists were released on bail yesterday, bringing the total number of detainees down from 30 to eleven. (The Guardian says 20 have been granted bail thus far.) The Bolotnaya Square protesters’ detentions have been extended for a further three months by a Moscow judge. The FSB is using critics of the Sochi Olympics as ‘practice targets’ in its preparatory anti-terrorism drills, says the Moscow Times, after outspoken environmentalist Dmitry Shevchenko was questioned for four hours at Krasnodar airpot on suspicion of belonging to a terrorist group.