They are facing serious criminal
charges that include hooliganism and attempting to incite religious hatred,
which could get them a sentence of seven years in prison. The weight of the charges, combined with the
timing of their arrests and the nature of the performance at the cathedral, has
led Amnesty International to declare the women “prisoners of conscience”
and call for their release. Russia's Human Rights Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin is
also saying that the women should be released since their alleged crimes do not
match up with the serious prison sentences they are facing. “Why are they in custody? Did they try to
blow up the cathedral?” Lukin asked at a press briefing in Tomsk, Russia.
But the Moscow Times is
reporting this morning that the women will remain in jail for the near
future. A Moscow judge ruled in favor of
extending their initial period of detention beyond the original term that would
expire on April 24, to give prosecutors more time to build their case. A recent public opinion poll suggests that
this decision is in line with the majority of Russians' attitude towards the
case. The poll conducted by the Russian
firm VTsIOM (the All-Russia Public Opinion Research Center) showed that 46% of
Russians considered Pussy Riot's “punk prayer” an act of hooliganism, with
another 21% going further to call the performance sacrilege; only 13% called it
legitimate protest, just slightly more than the number who thought Pussy Riot
was simply staging a PR stunt (10%).
Ultimately though, only 10% of those surveyed thought that the act
should land the Pussy Riot members in jail, mostly these were people who also
thought that the punk prayer was an act of sacrilege.
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