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Politics

Pussy Riot activists find asylum in Sweden

May 1, 2019

Two members of the Russian protest group have won an appeal on their asylum claim in Sweden. The couple said they had received death threats and feared arrest if forced to return to Moscow.

Pussy Riot protest in Moscow
Image: picture alliance / dpa

Lusine Djanyan and Alexey Knedlyakovsky, two members of the Russian protest group Pussy Riot, have been granted asylum in Sweden, public broadcaster SVT reported.

The two activists, parents of two children, initially filed an asylum claim in 2017 citing harassment death threats and fearing arrest if they were forced to return to Moscow. Their claim was denied by Sweden's immigration office, but they appealed the ruling.

"I am very happy that my children will be able to grow up in security, in particular in view of what has been going on [in Russia]," Djanyan told SVT after their asylum appeal was approved.

Political protests

The Pussy Riot collective was formed in August 2011 and consists of a dozen performers and several other members who handle technical work, such as recording and posting videos.

Often decked out in neon balaclavas and tights, the group has made its name with politically charged performances, protesting against everything from the Russian church to the persecution of gays in the country.

Knedlyakovsky was jailed for 15 days in 2016 for hanging a cross on a statue depicting the head of the FSB, Russia's security service.

Last year, the European Court of Human Rights condemned Russia for sentencing three Pussy Riot members to two years in a prison colony after they performed a protest song against Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2012. 

dv/cmk (AFP, dpa)

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