From today's AFP report Russian mother of seven accused of treason over Ukraine, by Anna Smolchenko:
"A mother of seven has been accused of treason for calling the Ukrainian embassy about Russian troop movements in the latest sign of Moscow attempting to cover up its intervention in its neighbouring state.
He added that the woman managed to keep her composure in detention. "She is keeping her chin up."...
Davydova's husband told AFP that his wife, who had taken an anti-war stance over the Ukraine conflict, phoned the Ukrainian embassy last April and apparently told them the local military base in Vyazma was empty, suggesting soldiers there had been deployed across the border.
She also apparently informed embassy staff she had overheard a serviceman saying troops of the Russian military intelligence service, the GRU, would be sent on a mission.
The troops would wear plainclothes and remain away at least until elections.
Davydova suspected the troops would be deployed to Ukraine which held presidential elections last May, Gorlov said.
The fighting between Moscow-backed separatists and government troops broke out in eastern Ukraine in April.
The Kremlin has denied Russian troops have been fighting alongside insurgents.
Last year Russia charged an elderly rights activist with fraud after she challenged Moscow's denials that its troops were on the ground in Ukraine.
Lyudmila Bogatenkova was released in October after an outcry but her criminal case remains open.
Davydova has four children with Gorlov and they are also raising three children from his previous marriage.
He insisted that his wife did not betray her country.
The case brings to mind some of the worst excesses of the Soviet repressive machine.
When reports of the arrest first appeared online, some appeared reluctant to believe such a case was even possible in modern Russia.
"There is no war but there are spies," one woman, Tatiana Tutaeva, wrote on Facebook..."
"A mother of seven has been accused of treason for calling the Ukrainian embassy about Russian troop movements in the latest sign of Moscow attempting to cover up its intervention in its neighbouring state.
She was still breastfeeding their youngest child, a two and a half month old girl, when she was taken away, he said.
The
woman -- who faces between 12 and 20 years in prison -- is being held
at the high-security Lefortovo jail in Moscow, her lawyer Andrei
Stebenev told AFP.
"She
called where she was not supposed to call and said what she was not
supposed to say," said Stebenev, who has been appointed by the state.
He said he could not comment further because the Russian General Staff said details of the case constituted a "state secret."
He added that the woman managed to keep her composure in detention. "She is keeping her chin up."...
Davydova's husband told AFP that his wife, who had taken an anti-war stance over the Ukraine conflict, phoned the Ukrainian embassy last April and apparently told them the local military base in Vyazma was empty, suggesting soldiers there had been deployed across the border.
She also apparently informed embassy staff she had overheard a serviceman saying troops of the Russian military intelligence service, the GRU, would be sent on a mission.
The troops would wear plainclothes and remain away at least until elections.
Davydova suspected the troops would be deployed to Ukraine which held presidential elections last May, Gorlov said.
The fighting between Moscow-backed separatists and government troops broke out in eastern Ukraine in April.
The Kremlin has denied Russian troops have been fighting alongside insurgents.
Last year Russia charged an elderly rights activist with fraud after she challenged Moscow's denials that its troops were on the ground in Ukraine.
Lyudmila Bogatenkova was released in October after an outcry but her criminal case remains open.
Davydova has four children with Gorlov and they are also raising three children from his previous marriage.
He insisted that his wife did not betray her country.
"She
does not want our military to take part in some kind of plot," Gorlov
said, adding that they both opposed Russia's seizure of Crimea last
March.
He said he was told to cooperate with the investigation or risk losing custody of his children...
Vladislav
Yusupov, a lawyer and rights activist, said the case was an
embarrassment for authorities who have enforced a virtual blackout on
any information related to Russia's intervention in Ukraine.
"The opening of this case is an acknowledgement that troops have been deployed to Ukraine."
President
Vladimir Putin said in December that any Russians fighting in Ukraine
had gone there "following the call of the heart".
The case brings to mind some of the worst excesses of the Soviet repressive machine.
When reports of the arrest first appeared online, some appeared reluctant to believe such a case was even possible in modern Russia.
"There is no war but there are spies," one woman, Tatiana Tutaeva, wrote on Facebook..."
No comments:
Post a Comment