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International Relations and Human Rights Observatory

08-05-2024

Exchange Between Russia and the West: 16 Political Prisoners Freed and Hundreds Still Behind Bars

In this scenario of a journey back to the world of espionage and the Cold War, it is worth asking what is real and what is not. The only way to resolve this dichotomy is by respecting the civil rights of local and foreign citizens, through fair, open trials with concrete evidence and charges.
By Ignacio E. Hutin

With the current war scenario in Europe, the world seems to have regressed to the times of the Cold War’s bipolar partition, with communism on one side and capitalism on the other. The division is no longer by the prevailing economic system, but the dispute for the political system and, above all, for hegemony returns. You are either on my side or with the enemy. It is no coincidence, then, that the largest prisoner exchange between Russia and the United States since the dissolution of the Soviet Union is now taking place. Russia and Belarus handed over 16 detainees in Ankara: 15 by the former and 1 by the latter, while the United States, Slovenia, Norway, Germany, and Poland delivered a total of 8 people to Moscow. Among those released by the Kremlin are journalists, political activists, and military personnel of various nationalities, including Russians accused by Moscow of espionage or treason.

It is good news to see innocent people, persecuted and unjustly accused, regain their freedom and be able to leave the country that imprisoned them. This is especially true after the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny last February while detained in a maximum-security prison and after numerous human rights organizations reported that his health was fragile and the government did not provide appropriate medical care.

However, the exchange leaves a bittersweet taste. First, because the people detained by Moscow and Minsk were unjustly accused, persecuted for asserting their fundamental civil rights. For many of them, their only crime was questioning the regime that later condemned them. For others, not even that. Thus, they became hostages of this regime, the most visible demonstration of intolerance toward anyone who dares to question the unquestionable.

On the other hand, because there are still too many political prisoners in Russian cells. According to the Memorial Human Rights Center (winner of the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize and officially dissolved by the Russian government the same year) and its Political Prisoners Support Program, there are currently 765 political prisoners in Russia, 633 persecuted, and 135 possible victims. The organization OVD-Info speaks of 1289 political prisoners in pre-trial detention centers and prisons. Thus, this exchange brings relief, yes, but it also reminds us that there is a long way to go to end the Kremlin’s harassment of its dissidents.

It is relevant to note the names of the 16 freed, considering that their stories are just a small percentage of the total unjustly detained:

  • Vladimir Kara-Murza, politician and journalist, sentenced in 2023 to 25 years in prison for "treason, cooperation with an undesirable organization, and spreading falsehoods." He was detained shortly after speaking before the Arizona House of Representatives, USA, denouncing the Russian government’s actions in Ukraine.
  • Evan Gershkovich, an American journalist for the Wall Street Journal, detained in 2023 and sentenced last July to 16 years for espionage, although no evidence was ever presented. He was the first Western journalist to be imprisoned in Russia on this charge since the end of the Cold War.
  • The same charge and sentence faced former US Marine Paul Whelan.
  • Russian-American journalist Alsu Kurmasheva, of Radio Liberty, was sentenced in 2024 to 6 and a half years for "reporting false information."
  • For the same charge, politician Ilya Yashin, former leader of the People’s Freedom Party (founded by Boris Nemtsov, who was assassinated in 2015), was sentenced to 8 and a half years in 2022.
  • Oleg Orlov, human rights activist and president of the Memorial Human Rights Center Board of Directors, was sentenced to two and a half years for criticizing the Russian armed forces.
  • Artist Sasha Skochilenko had been sentenced to 7 years for placing information about the bombing of the Ukrainian city of Mariupol in a supermarket in St. Petersburg.
  • Russian-German Kevin Lik, just 19 years old, was sentenced to 4 years for treason.
  • German Rico Krieger was detained in Belarus and sentenced to death for terrorism. He was forced to confess to attempting to place explosives on a railway line under orders from the Ukrainian Security Service.
  • Ksenia Fadeyeva was part of the Anti-Corruption Foundation, led by Navalny, in the city of Tomsk. She was detained in 2021 and sentenced to 9 years for "being part of an extremist organization."
  • Liliya Chanysheva and Vadim Ostanin, part of the same organization in Ufa and Barnaul respectively, received the same sentence in 2023 in secret trials.
  • Andrei Pivovarov, a member of Open Russia (an organization where Kara-Murza was a coordinator), was sentenced to 4 years for being part of an "undesirable" organization. In 2022, he became the first political prisoner in Russian history to run for election.
  • German Moyzhes, a Russian-German lawyer working as a European residency permit manager for Russian citizens, was detained this year on treason charges.
  • Russian-German political scientist Dieter Voronin was sentenced to 13 years for treason, accused of using confidential information.
  • German Patrick Schöbel was accused of drug trafficking because six gummy bears containing cannabis were found on him at the St. Petersburg airport. His detention occurred shortly after Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke of a prisoner exchange that would allow the release of Russian citizen Vadim Krasikov, imprisoned in Germany for murder.

Many of those recently detained, after the start of the large-scale invasion of Ukraine, faced charges that seemed tailored for this exchange. Moscow simply intended to recover its own and, for that, had to detain journalists, young tourists, anyone traveling to Putin’s lands with a Western passport, particularly from the United States or Germany. Only an excuse was needed. Now, Russia hands over political prisoners and recovers murderers and fraudsters:

  • Vadim Krasikov, a member of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB). He was sentenced to life in Germany for murdering a Chechen exile in a Berlin park in 2019. Putin described him this year as "a patriot."
  • Artem Dultsev and Anna Dultseva were detained in Slovenia, where they resided under false names and Argentine passports. They are accused of being members of the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) and carrying out espionage tasks.
  • Businessman Vladislav Klyushin was sentenced to 9 years in Boston, USA, for stealing confidential information from companies.
  • Roman Seleznev received a 27-year sentence in Washington for carrying out a cyberattack against thousands of US companies.
  • Vadim Konoshchenok, a member of the FSB, was arrested in Estonia in 2023 and extradited to the United States for smuggling electronic equipment to Russia.
  • Mikhail Mikushin, who resided in Norway under a false name and Brazilian passport, was accused of being a GRU member.

This spy game and accusations that seem stolen from the Cold War raise two fundamental questions: could any of those accused by Russia have actually committed a serious crime? Looking at each story, it doesn’t seem to be the case. Therefore, it is worth turning the question around: could any of those freed by Western countries have been truly innocent?

The last detainee who was part of this exchange was Spanish journalist Pablo González, who worked for, among other media outlets, the television channel La Sexta. Born in Moscow, the son of a Spanish mother and a Russian father, he moved to the Basque Country at the age of 9. Shortly after the start of the Russian invasion in 2022, he moved from Ukraine to Poland, where he was detained for alleged espionage and remained incommunicado. However, no evidence was presented against him, nor was there a formal charge for more than two and a half years. Even if he were guilty (which is a concrete possibility), the exceptional nature of his detention raises many doubts.

This irregular detention was denounced by the Committee to Protect Journalists, the Federation of Spanish Journalists’ Associations, the International Federation of Journalists, and Reporters Without Borders, among other organizations.

In this scenario of a journey back to the world of espionage and the Cold War, it is worth asking what is real and what is not. The only way to resolve this dichotomy is by respecting the civil rights of local and foreign citizens, through fair, open trials with concrete evidence and charges. Otherwise, it will be illegitimate persecution. The solution to the injustices committed by authoritarian regimes cannot be to become the cannibal; it cannot be to operate in the same way as the enemy.

Instead, acting responsibly and insisting on the release of political prisoners is the best response that can be given to the hundreds of men and women who remain unfairly behind Russian bars.

Ignacio E. Hutin
Ignacio E. Hutin
Advisory Councelor
Master in International Relations (University of Salvador, 2021), Graduate in Journalism (University of Salvador, 2014), specialized in Leadership in Humanitarian Emergencies (National Defense University, 2019) and studied photography (ARGRA, 2009). He is a focused in Eastern Europe, post-Soviet Eurasia and the Balkans. He received a scholarship from the Finnish State to carry out studies related to the Arctic at the University of Lapland (2012). He is the author of the books Saturn (2009), Deconstruction: Chronicles and Reflections from Post-Communist Eastern Europe (2018), Ukraine/Donbass: A Renewed Cold War (2021), and Ukraine: Chronicle from the Frontlines (2021).
 
 
 

 
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