Russia: No let up for spy mania victim Valentin Danilov
In December a Krasnoyarsk court refused to change the harsh conditions in which scientist Valentin Danilov, imprisoned for 13 years over seriously questionable “spying” charges, is being held.
Although Valentin Danilov has already served two thirds of his sentence, he was not even applying for release on parole as he should be entitled, but only less harsh conditions.
A situation was deliberately orchestrated resulting in Danilov receiving two punishments, this serving as the formal grounds for the court’s rejection of his application. The court ruling was appealed, but Ernst Cherny from the Public Committee for the Defence of Scientists informed this week that this was rejected.
http://hro.org/node/13074
Statement on the release of Igor Sutiagin and continued imprisonment of many other scientists
“Different roads lead to Skolkovo and the GULAG”
Over recent days the Russian authorities have carried out an exchange of the talented Russian researcher Igor Sutiagin for Russian spies who messed up their task. The Committee in Defence of Scientists welcomes Sutiagin’s release from prison, however expresses its bemusement over the theatrical spectacle concocted for the view of the international community. Is it really only the clumsy work of agents of the Foreign Intelligence Service that can serve to release Russian scientists sentenced on trumped up charges?
The Committee in Defence of Scientists would remind people that the talented physicist and weapons expert, Igor Sutiagin never had access to secret documents or military objects, and researched weapons solely from open sources, therefore he could not, by definition, be accused of spying.
Defying commonsense, he was convicted and spent nearly 11 years in custody after which instead of granting early conditional release, he was through blackmail forced into signing papers stating guilt and taken to the United Kingdom where the scientist had absolutely no plans of going.
We would point out that Russian legislation does not envisage the deprivation of citizenship and does not allow the authorities the right to at their own discretion “evict” dissenting individuals to other countries.
The Committee in Defence of Scientists will make every effort to seek a swift examination of Igor Sutiagin’s application to the European Court of Human Rights for compensation for the years he was held for nothing in captivity.
We are forced to remind people that only Sutyagin was released, but the following scientists remain in prison: Valentin Danilov, Igor Reshetin, Mikhail Ivanov, Alexander Rozhkin, Sergei Vizir, Ivan Petkov, Yevgeny Afanasiev and Sviatoslav Bobyshev. All of these people are equally the victims of spymania.
How many more spies have to muff their tasks before these scientists are freed?
It is harder to develop Russian science than to tell voters about Skolkovo. Science begins with respect for scientists, yet today they are cannon fodder for fighters of an invisible front head by the ideologue of spy-mania Vladimir Putin. Judging by the last events, our security services are daring and adept only when fighting their own citizens.
We demand from the President and Guarantor of the Constitution that he immediately releases from imprisonment scientist victims of spy-mania and finds the State guilty of the unlawful exile of Igor Sutiagin.
Ludmila Alexeeva
Yelena Bonner
Vladimir Bukovsky
Ernst Cherny
Roman Dobrokhotov
Svetlana Gannushkina
Sergei Kovalev
Alexander Nikitin
Oleg Orlov
Lev Ponomarev
Boris Pustyshev
Yury Ryzhov
Alexei Simonov
Alexei Yablokov
Yury Vdovin