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'Ukraine must win': Five members of Pussy Riot sentenced to jail in Russia

Pussy Riot's Diana Burkot, Anton Ponomarev, Masha Alyokhina and Olga Borisova perform at the Kaserne in Basel, Switzerland - June 2022
Pussy Riot's Diana Burkot, Anton Ponomarev, Masha Alyokhina and Olga Borisova perform at the Kaserne in Basel, Switzerland - June 2022 Copyright  AP Photo
Copyright AP Photo
By David Mouriquand
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Five members of the feminist punk group Pussy Riot have been sentenced in absentia to prison in Russia. One member, Diana Burkot, said: “Ukraine must win, and Putin must face trial in The Hague.”

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Five members of Pussy Riot have been sentenced in absentia to prison in Russia on charges relating to anti-war performances criticising the war in Ukraine.  

Reports from Mediazona – the independent Russian outlet co-founded by band members in the feminist punk collective – reveal the members sentenced included Maria Alyokhina, Taso Pletner, Olga Borisova, Alina Petrova and Diana Burkot.

The jail terms handed down by Moscow’s Basmanny District Court ranged from eight to 13 years, according to Rolling Stone and Mediazona. 

The members are accused of spreading “false information” about the Russian army in a music video released in December 2022 entitled 'Mama, Don’t Watch TV'. A separate charge relates to an incident in which a member of the group urinated on a portrait of Vladimir Putin in April 2024. 

All five members of Pussy Riot have rejected the charges, saying they were politically motivated.

Diana Burkot, from left, Anton Ponomarev, Maria Alyokhina and Olga Borisova perform at Funkhaus Berlin, in Berlin - May 2022
Diana Burkot, from left, Anton Ponomarev, Maria Alyokhina and Olga Borisova perform at Funkhaus Berlin, in Berlin - May 2022 AP Photo

In a statement given to Rolling Stone, Diana Burkot said: “The full-scale war against Ukraine has been going on for more than three years. And I continue to believe: Ukraine must win, and Putin must face trial in The Hague.” 

Burkot added: “The Russian government is a textbook example of patriarchy – the worst kind of abuser: a tyrant, a narcissist, a gaslighter, a toxic manipulator who lives off the destruction of others’ will.” 

She urged “every person in this world to use their voice,” and went on to say that collective activism was the only way to “resist and overcome the crisis of democracy”. Burkot said that thankfully, the Russian government has “no access to my physical body,” but that “even if I were in Russia, I would say the same thing: go fuck yourself.” 

Nadezhda Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot performs at the Sonic Temple Art and Music Festival at Mapfre Stadium - 2019
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot performs at the Sonic Temple Art and Music Festival at Mapfre Stadium - 2019 AP Photo

Pussy Riot rose to fame in 2012 with their protest piece ‘A Punk Prayer’, when three members of the group were imprisoned for a protest at a cathedral in Moscow.  

Since then, the group has consistently opposed Putin’s authoritarian regime and its clampdown on freedom of speech. 

In 2023, member Nadya Tolokonnikova was arrested in absentia and added to Russia’s International Wanted list. Last year, a court in Moscow sentenced Pyotr Verzilov - the unofficial spokesperson of Pussy Riot who left Russia in 2020 after authorities searched his home - to eight years and four months in absentia in prison for social media posts criticising the war in Ukraine. 

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