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Armenian Activist Could Face Jail Time

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  • Armenian Activist Could Face Jail Time

    Armenian Activist Could Face Jail Time

    asbarez
    Friday, June 8th, 2012


    Suren Gazaryan stands next to a sticker that reads Suren Gazaryan and
    Evgenii Vitishko/We Are With You/Freedom for the Environmental
    Activists. Photo by Karena Avedissian.
    BY KARENA AVEDISSIAN
    >From Transitions Online

    KRASNODAR, Russia - On the afternoon of November 13, environmental
    activists Suren Gazaryan and Evgenii Vitishko crept through a forest
    preserve on the Black Sea coast, past security guards and toward a
    fence surrounding a villa. Their mission was part protest - in spray
    paint on the fence, they called the provincial governor a thief and
    declared, `This is our forest' - and part reconnaissance, to see what
    was happening on the other side.

    When they cut through the fence, they found trees had been illegally
    felled, among them endangered Pitsunda pines. A whole complex was
    under construction, including a swimming pool and tennis court,
    despite a ban on such development in forest preserves.

    The activists say the protected land was seized illegally to build the
    villa, which records show is owned by Alexander Tkachev, governor of
    Russia's Krasnodar region. The fence surrounding it and a much wider
    area of about 7 hectares (17 acres) of forest along the shore also
    prevents public access to the land and beach, in violation of Russian
    law.

    Instead of hearing the activists' complaints, however, prosecutors
    charged Gazaryan and Vitishko with vandalism. Three months later, the
    charge was upgraded to `willful damage of property with motives of
    hooliganism,' increasing the potential penalty to five years in
    prison.

    The case has become a cause not just for environmental activists in
    the southern region of Krasnodar but across the country. And it comes
    at a time when voices for the environment have become a significant
    part of Russia's growing protest movement.

    Last month, Evgenia Chirikova, leader of a group fighting to protect
    the Khimki forest northwest of Moscow from a major highway project,
    received the $150,000 Goldman Environmental Prize, widely known as the
    `Green Nobel.' Other activists in the Khimki forest fight have been
    attacked, including one journalist who was left brain damaged after a
    beating and had to have three fingers and his right leg amputated.

    In Krasnodar, the activists often run afoul not only of local
    bureaucrats and businessmen, but also of some of Russia's most
    powerful figures. The region, which sits on the Black Sea just north
    of the Caucasus region, is a major tourist destination, and a popular
    site for the second homes of Russia's elite. It is also home to a
    delicate ecosystem that includes the country's last remaining
    Mediterranean pine forests and pistachio trees.

    A road under construction through a UNESCO World Heritage forest to a
    ski resort built by state oil company Rosneft; a residence for the
    head of the Russian Orthodox Church on the Black Sea coast near the
    city of Gelendzhik; Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev's villa in the
    Utrish nature reserve - all occupy public land in Krasnodar and are
    patrolled by private security guards.

    The activists of Environmental Watch, to which Gazaryan and Vitishko
    belong, say corruption is one of the greatest obstacles to stopping
    such projects in the region.

    `Environmental violations are often allowed by the state structures.
    If it's a private business, then it turns out that the state knows
    about it and to condemn it is pointless, because [government
    officials] are benefiting,' activist Dmitri Shestochenko said.

    `The governmental structures for environmental protection just don't
    work,' Anna Mitrenko, another activist, said. `When we inform the
    authorities about an environmental problem, they just say, `There is
    no problem here.' Everything is infected with corruption. It's the
    system - it's a web that the Russian people are caught in.'

    Activists say preparations for the 2014 Olympics, which will take
    place in the Krasnodar city of Sochi, have made matters worse, with
    projects allowed to take priority over environmental regulations. Last
    year a toxic spill into the Mzymta river related to drilling for a
    road and rail line near the town of Adler polluted drinking water for
    residents nearby. No state agencies or companies tied to the spill
    were held accountable.

    In other cases, when activists have managed to draw attention to
    questionable projects, environmental laws are watered down ad hoc.

    `Environmental legislation is getting weaker and weaker,' Gazaryan
    said. `Previously it was illegal to cut down endangered species of
    trees. When they did that in preparation for the Sochi Olympics, we
    went and interfered. Then a month later, the authorities made
    amendments to the legislation that allowed it specifically for the
    Olympics,' he said.

    In the matter of the Tkachev villa, local officials initially denied
    any link between the governor and the territory within the
    controversial fence. However, Tkachev said earlier this year that
    about 70 percent of the fenced-off land is leased to a private company
    called Agrokompleks, of which his father is a shareholder. Activists
    contend the tie goes deeper, saying the regional real estate register
    lists Tkachev himself as the owner.

    Russian law allows forest preserve land to be leased as long as it
    remains publicly accessible. It also allows development of the
    property, but only with temporary structures made of light materials
    such as wood - not with the concrete, brick, and iron that went into
    the construction of the villa.

    `Anyone familiar with the case knows that the reaction of the
    authorities is political,' said Natalia Dorohina, a journalist with
    the Caucasian Knot website who has followed the matter.

    The Krasnodar regional administration did not answer repeated requests
    for comment on the case, or on Environmental Watch's claims about the
    villa's ownership.

    Like the Khimki forest activists, those in Krasnodar have faced
    physical intimidation.

    In March, Gazaryan and his lawyer, Viktor Dutlov, were inspecting the
    area surrounding Tkachev's villa when private security guards
    handcuffed them, seized Gazaryan's camera and cell phone, and detained
    the men for five hours. When police arrived, they arrested Gazaryan
    and Dutlov, who were sentenced the following morning to 10 days in
    jail for `resisting police orders.'

    News of their arrests spread through Russian Internet forums and
    social networks. Within days, a wave of protests swept across dozens
    of Russian cities in support of the activists.

    Greenpeace Russia has collected more than 22,000 signatures on a
    petition demanding that the charges against Gazaryan and Vitishko be
    dropped. The campaign was brought to the attention of then-president
    Medvedev, who promised to review the cases but did not act. Newly
    inaugurated President Vladimir Putin is not expected to take up the
    issue.

    The activists continue to conduct inspections of Tkachev's fence and
    post information about their findings on Twitter, in blogs, and on the
    Vkontakte and Facebook social networking sites, where they also post
    news of any new detentions.

    `The only way to protect the environment is to increase activism,'
    Shestochenko of Environmental Watch said. Since Putin's United Russia
    party came to power in 2007, he added, `it was clear ... that the
    authorities were counting on our silence - because no one knew about
    [their projects] yet. They wanted to do it quietly, but that didn't
    happen.'

    In the meantime, crackdowns on protesters continue. Yaroslav Nikolski,
    a member of Environmental Watch and the reformist Yabloko Party, was
    arrested April 13 after protesting another Tkachev project -
    construction of a gubernatorial residence on land that recently
    belonged to a kindergarten.

    Gazaryan and Vitishko have had two court hearings so far, with most of
    their attorney's motions rejected by the judge. Many observers are
    predicting a guilty verdict. The next hearing was set for June 6.

    Karena Avedissian is a doctoral researcher at the University of
    Birmingham studying social movements in southern Russia.

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