{"id":56547,"date":"2025-12-29T18:57:59","date_gmt":"2025-12-29T15:57:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/?post_type=analytics&#038;p=56547"},"modified":"2026-03-17T19:01:01","modified_gmt":"2026-03-17T16:01:01","slug":"from-discrediting-the-military-to-high-treason-and-terrorism","status":"publish","type":"analytics","link":"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/analytics\/from-discrediting-the-military-to-high-treason-and-terrorism\/","title":{"rendered":"From \u00abDiscrediting\u00bb the Military to\u00a0High Treason and Terrorism"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Sergei Davidis on\u00a0the evolution of\u00a0political repression in\u00a0Russia since the start of\u00a0the war<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;the nearly four years since Russia\u2019s full-scale invasion of&nbsp;Ukraine on&nbsp;February 24, 2022, a&nbsp;substantial body of&nbsp;evidence has accumulated showing that external observers often have a&nbsp;severely limited and frequently distorted understanding of&nbsp;the repressive reality in&nbsp;today\u2019s Russia. Yet a&nbsp;clear grasp of&nbsp;the true scale of&nbsp;these repressions is&nbsp;essential, not least for shaping a&nbsp;more effective and consistent Western policy toward Moscow.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Evolution of&nbsp;Repression: From Gradual Acceleration to&nbsp;Explosive Growth<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Political repression in&nbsp;Russia did not, of&nbsp;course, appear out of&nbsp;nowhere on&nbsp;February 24, 2022. It&nbsp;had long become a&nbsp;comprehensive instrument of&nbsp;state control over society well before that grim milestone. Even if&nbsp;we&nbsp;confine ourselves to&nbsp;the harshest form\u2014deprivation of&nbsp;liberty through politically motivated criminal prosecutions\u2014the trajectory of&nbsp;such measures reveals much about the development of&nbsp;Russia\u2019s authoritarian regime.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The \u00ab<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/\">Support for Political Prisoners. Memorial<\/a>\u00bb project (until 2022, the political prisoner support&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memohrc.org\/en\/content\/support-political-prisoners\">program<\/a>&nbsp;of&nbsp;the Memorial Human Rights Center) has maintained lists of&nbsp;political prisoners in&nbsp;Russia since 2008, based on&nbsp;the&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/assembly.coe.int\/nw\/xml\/XRef\/Xref-XML2HTML-en.asp?fileid=19150&amp;lang=en\">definition<\/a>&nbsp;adopted by&nbsp;the Parliamentary Assembly of&nbsp;the Council of&nbsp;Europe in&nbsp;2012 (and previously on&nbsp;Memorial\u2019s own nearly identical formulation). Despite the inevitable incompleteness of&nbsp;these data\u2014particularly in&nbsp;recent years, when they reflect only a&nbsp;verified lower bound of&nbsp;repression and inevitably lag behind events\u2014they clearly delineate the overall trend.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/ridl.io\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/photo_2025-12-30_13-28-06-1024x597.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-19478\"\/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>The repressive machinery gathered speed gradually, with only one notable pause at&nbsp;the end of&nbsp;2013, when Putin released most political prisoners ahead of&nbsp;the Sochi Olympics. The pace accelerated sharply after 2020, following the adoption of&nbsp;constitutional \u00abamendments,\u00bb the designation of&nbsp;Alexei Navalny\u2019s structures as&nbsp;extremist, and his own imprisonment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Around the same time, Belarus saw an&nbsp;explosive surge in&nbsp;political repression (even after some releases of&nbsp;prisoners of&nbsp;conscience, at&nbsp;least 1,100 political prisoners remain in&nbsp;Belarusian jails\u2014in a&nbsp;country with a&nbsp;population fifteen times smaller than Russia\u2019s). Unlike the Belarusian regime, which was responding to&nbsp;a&nbsp;direct challenge, the Russian authorities faced no&nbsp;comparable threat at&nbsp;the time. It&nbsp;appeared they were preparing in&nbsp;advance for something far larger. The logic of&nbsp;their actions became clear only in&nbsp;2022.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The full-scale invasion of&nbsp;Ukraine demanded a&nbsp;new level of&nbsp;societal control\u2014and, accordingly, a&nbsp;new scale and quality of&nbsp;repression.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>A&nbsp;New Phase of&nbsp;Repressions in&nbsp;Russia Post-2022: Legislation and Practice<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The evolution of&nbsp;political repression in&nbsp;Russia since the full-scale invasion of&nbsp;Ukraine in&nbsp;2022 can be&nbsp;characterized by&nbsp;three main developments: the introduction of&nbsp;draconian new legislative measures, a&nbsp;significant tightening and simplification of&nbsp;enforcement practices, and a&nbsp;sharp increase in&nbsp;the number of&nbsp;victims of&nbsp;politically motivated prosecutions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The most prominent provisions targeting opponents of&nbsp;the war are those criminalizing the \u00abdissemination of&nbsp;knowingly false information about the Armed Forces of&nbsp;the Russian Federation\u00bb (Article 207.3 of&nbsp;the Criminal Code, punishable by&nbsp;up&nbsp;to 10 years\u2019 imprisonment) and the \u00abdiscreditation\u00bb of&nbsp;the armed forces (Article 280.3, up&nbsp;to&nbsp;5 years). These were enacted almost immediately after the invasion, in&nbsp;March 2022.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The scope of&nbsp;new repressive legislation, however, extends far beyond these headline measures. Among the most illustrative are:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li>Up\u00a0to\u00a08 years for confidential cooperation with a\u00a0foreign state or\u00a0organization (Article 275.1);<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Up\u00a0to\u00a06 years for calls to\u00a0engage in\u00a0activities directed against state security (Article 280.4);<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Up\u00a0to\u00a05 years for facilitating decisions of\u00a0international organizations in\u00a0which Russia does not participate (Article 284.3);<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Up\u00a0to\u00a04 years for repeated public display of\u00a0extremist or\u00a0other prohibited symbols (Article 282.4);<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Up\u00a0to\u00a03 years for operating on\u00a0Russian territory on\u00a0behalf of\u00a0a\u00a0foreign or\u00a0international NGO without official registration (Article 330.3);<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>Up\u00a0to\u00a03 years for calls for sanctions against Russia or\u00a0Russian individuals and legal entities (Article 284.2).<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;addition, the war has prompted severe penalties for voluntary surrender to&nbsp;the enemy (Article 352.1), aiding subversive activities (Article 281.1), training for such activities (Article 281.2), and forming subversive groups (Article 281.3), among others. Many of&nbsp;these provisions have been repeatedly toughened; for instance, in&nbsp;November 2025 the age of&nbsp;criminal responsibility for terrorism and sabotage was lowered from 16 to&nbsp;14.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The war has also led to&nbsp;the broadening of&nbsp;existing offense definitions, the simplification of&nbsp;prosecution procedures, and harsher penalties under a&nbsp;range of&nbsp;Criminal Code articles, including high treason, espionage, participation in&nbsp;foreign armed formations, activities of&nbsp;\u00abundesirable organizations,\u00bb failure to&nbsp;fulfill obligations as a&nbsp;\u00abforeign agent,\u00bb establishment of&nbsp;NGOs deemed to&nbsp;infringe citizens\u2019 rights, draft evasion, and others.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A&nbsp;defining feature of&nbsp;the new legislation is&nbsp;the vagueness of&nbsp;its wording and the subjective nature of&nbsp;the prohibitions. There is, for example, no&nbsp;legal definition of&nbsp;\u00abdiscreditation,\u00bb while the interpretation of&nbsp;\u00abstate security interests\u00bb is&nbsp;left entirely to&nbsp;the discretion of&nbsp;law enforcement and the courts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This linguistic ambiguity is&nbsp;compounded by&nbsp;profound changes in&nbsp;enforcement practice. Russia\u2019s official rejection of&nbsp;\u00abalien Western values\u201d\u2014including standards of&nbsp;fair trial and human rights more broadly\u2014coupled with its withdrawal from the Council of&nbsp;Europe and numerous international treaties, has largely eliminated the need to&nbsp;maintain even the pretense of&nbsp;adversarial judicial proceedings.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Thus, any expression of&nbsp;disagreement with the war is&nbsp;routinely classified as&nbsp;\u00abdiscrediting the use of&nbsp;the armed forces\u00bb (Article 280.3) without requiring evidence. For instance,&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/abramova-elena-arnoldovna\/\">Elena Abramova<\/a>&nbsp;from St. Petersburg received a&nbsp;two-year sentence for a&nbsp;solo picket holding a&nbsp;sign reading \u00abNo&nbsp;to&nbsp;War!\u00bb&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/ezhov-denis-sergeevich\/\">Denis Ezhov<\/a>&nbsp;from annexed Crimea was sentenced to&nbsp;one year for publicly shouting \u00abGlory to&nbsp;Ukraine\u2014everything will be&nbsp;Ukraine!\u00bb&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/dossier\/delo-olega-orlova-o-diskreditaczii-armii\/\">Oleg Orlov<\/a>, a&nbsp;70-year-old human rights defender and co-founder of&nbsp;Memorial, was given two and a&nbsp;half years for stating: \u00abThe bloody war unleashed by&nbsp;Putin\u2019s regime in&nbsp;Ukraine is&nbsp;not only the mass murder of&nbsp;people and the destruction of&nbsp;infrastructure, economy, and cultural sites in&nbsp;that remarkable country. It&nbsp;is&nbsp;not only the destruction of&nbsp;the foundations of&nbsp;international law. It&nbsp;is&nbsp;also the heaviest blow to&nbsp;Russia\u2019s own future.\u00bb Nineteen-year-old student Daria Kozyreva received two years and eight months for affixing a&nbsp;sheet with lines from a&nbsp;Taras Shevchenko poem to&nbsp;the pedestal of&nbsp;his monument.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even more egregious from a&nbsp;legal standpoint is&nbsp;the application of&nbsp;the graver charge of&nbsp;disseminating knowingly false information about the actions of&nbsp;the armed forces (Article 207.3). In&nbsp;practice, this provision effectively reverses the presumption of&nbsp;innocence: Russian courts deem any information diverging from official Ministry of&nbsp;Defense statements to&nbsp;be&nbsp;false. The accused is&nbsp;presumed to&nbsp;be&nbsp;aware of&nbsp;those statements and to&nbsp;recognize the falsity of&nbsp;anything contradicting them. Prosecutions under this article most commonly arise from posts about alleged Russian war crimes in&nbsp;Ukraine\u2014mass killings of&nbsp;civilians in&nbsp;Bucha and Irpin, strikes on&nbsp;the Mariupol theater and Kramatorsk railway station, and residential buildings in&nbsp;Dnipro, Uman, and other cities. At&nbsp;least 25 people have been sentenced to&nbsp;prison terms solely for posts about the Bucha tragedy. The longest sentence\u2014eight and a&nbsp;half years\u2014was handed to&nbsp;prominent opposition politician&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/figurant\/yashin-ilya-valerevich\/\">Ilya Yashin<\/a>&nbsp;for discussing Bucha in&nbsp;a&nbsp;video.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Charges of&nbsp;spreading \u00abfakes\u00bb about the military are not limited to&nbsp;social media posts or&nbsp;references to&nbsp;war crimes. Siberian journalist&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/afanasev-mihail-vyacheslavovich\/\">Mikhail Afanasyev<\/a>&nbsp;received five and a&nbsp;half years for reporting that several National Guard officers had refused to&nbsp;participate in&nbsp;the war. Moscow resident&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/kohovecz-yurij-anatolevich\/\">Yuri Kokhovets<\/a>&nbsp;was sentenced to&nbsp;five years for criticizing the war during a&nbsp;street interview. Sixty-eight-year-old pediatrician&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/buyanova-nadezhda-fyodorovna\/\">Nadezhda Buyanova<\/a>&nbsp;received five and a&nbsp;half years for allegedly telling a&nbsp;patient that Russian forces in&nbsp;Ukraine were a&nbsp;legitimate target for the Ukrainian armed forces. The first person convicted under this article was municipal deputy and lawyer&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/dossier\/delo-municzipalnyh-deputatov-gorinova-i-kotyonochkinoj\/\">Alexei Gorinov<\/a>, who received six years and eleven months for remarks made at&nbsp;a&nbsp;local council meeting: \u00abCombat operations are taking place on&nbsp;the territory of&nbsp;a&nbsp;neighboring sovereign state; our country is&nbsp;committing aggression\u2026 Children are dying every day\u2014nearly a&nbsp;hundred children have already died in&nbsp;Ukraine.\u00bb<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Enormous scope for arbitrary application also exists under Article 205.2 (public calls for terrorism, justification of&nbsp;terrorism, or&nbsp;propaganda of&nbsp;terrorism), which has recently become the primary tool for prosecuting speech. Sentences of&nbsp;up&nbsp;to seven years are imposed, for example, for any positive mention of&nbsp;organizations designated as&nbsp;terrorist in&nbsp;Russia\u2014particularly Ukrainian formations such as&nbsp;Azov, Aidar, the Freedom of&nbsp;Russia Legion, or&nbsp;the Russian Volunteer Corps. Grounds for prosecution can also include positive or&nbsp;even neutral assessments of&nbsp;Ukrainian strikes on&nbsp;Russian targets or&nbsp;rhetorical wishes for the death of&nbsp;occupiers or&nbsp;of&nbsp;Putin personally. At&nbsp;least 27 people are currently imprisoned for allegedly \u00abjustifying\u00bb attacks on&nbsp;the Crimean Bridge.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Sociologist and commentator&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/kagarlitsky-boris-yulyevich\/\">Boris Kagarlitsky<\/a>&nbsp;was sentenced to&nbsp;five years for stating that, from the Ukrainian perspective, the Crimean Bridge was a&nbsp;legitimate target. A&nbsp;couple from Leningrad Region,&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/dossier\/delo-anastasii-dyudyaevoj-i-aleksandra-doczenko\/\">Anastasia Dyudyaeva and Alexander Dotsenko<\/a>, received three and a&nbsp;half and three years respectively for placing postcards in&nbsp;a&nbsp;supermarket containing the line \u00abPutin to&nbsp;the gallows.\u00bb&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/shirshikov-yaroslav-yurevich\/\">Yaroslav Shirshikov<\/a>&nbsp;from Yekaterinburg was given five years for saying he&nbsp;felt no&nbsp;sympathy for the killed pro-war blogger Vladlen Tatarsky.&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/ogolczov-konstantin-sergeevich\/\">Konstantin Ogoltsov<\/a>&nbsp;from Chelyabinsk received six years for calling the commander of&nbsp;the Freedom of&nbsp;Russia Legion a&nbsp;\u00abtrue hero\u00bb and writing that the Azov battalion was defending its homeland and that its members were, if&nbsp;not heroes, at&nbsp;least patriots.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even indirect or&nbsp;veiled expressions of&nbsp;dissent can be&nbsp;prosecuted under a&nbsp;wide array of&nbsp;other Criminal Code articles. Former Bauman University lecturer&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/zona.media\/news\/2025\/12\/19\/nstrnk3\">Alexander Nesterenko<\/a>&nbsp;was recently sentenced to&nbsp;three years for posting several Ukrainian songs on&nbsp;VKontakte\u2014convicted of&nbsp;calls to&nbsp;extremism (Article 280.2), though initially also charged with inciting hatred (Article 282). Krasnoyarsk resident&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/orlovskij-igor-sergeevich\/\">Igor Orlovsky<\/a>, sentenced to&nbsp;a&nbsp;total of&nbsp;seven and a&nbsp;half years on&nbsp;multiple political charges, received two of&nbsp;those years for \u00abrehabilitating Nazism\u00bb (Article 354.1) after comparing Stalin to&nbsp;Hitler as&nbsp;aggressors.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Arbitrariness is&nbsp;no&nbsp;less evident in&nbsp;the far harsher prosecution of&nbsp;protest actions. Since the full-scale invasion, and especially after the September 2022 mobilization, arson attacks on&nbsp;military enlistment offices and other administrative buildings have become widespread. Identical acts are classified inconsistently\u2014sometimes as&nbsp;property damage (Article 167, up&nbsp;to&nbsp;5 years), sometimes as&nbsp;hooliganism (Article 213, up&nbsp;to&nbsp;8 years), and increasingly as&nbsp;terrorism (Article 205, up&nbsp;to&nbsp;20 years). Over time, the proportion of&nbsp;terrorism charges has steadily risen; today the majority of&nbsp;such arson cases are prosecuted under this article.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;the absence of&nbsp;legal avenues for dissent, these arsons have effectively become symbolic anti-war statements. In&nbsp;the overwhelming majority of&nbsp;cases, they involve empty buildings at&nbsp;night, cause either negligible damage (quickly extinguished) or&nbsp;no&nbsp;fire at&nbsp;all, and many attempts are thwarted at&nbsp;the preparation stage. Legally, such acts fall squarely under intentional destruction or&nbsp;damage to&nbsp;property by&nbsp;arson (Part 2 of&nbsp;Article 167), which carries a&nbsp;maximum of&nbsp;five years and does not criminalize preparation. To&nbsp;qualify as&nbsp;terrorism (Article 205), prosecutors must prove intent to&nbsp;intimidate the population. In&nbsp;practice, however, courts almost never require such proof, treating intimidation as&nbsp;self-evident and thus enabling far harsher sentences.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For example, two young men from Chelyabinsk Region,&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/dossier\/delo-alekseya-nurieva-i-romana-nasryeva\/\">Alexei Nuriev and Roman Nasryev<\/a>, slightly scorched two small patches of&nbsp;linoleum while attempting to&nbsp;set fire to&nbsp;a&nbsp;military registration desk; each was nevertheless sentenced to&nbsp;19 years\u2014not only for the unsubstantiated terrorism charge but also for allegedly undergoing training for terrorist activity (Article 205.3) simply for preparing the act. Volgograd resident&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/paskar-igor-konstantinovich\/\">Igor Paskar<\/a>&nbsp;received eight and a&nbsp;half years for terrorism plus vandalism (Article 214) after setting fire to&nbsp;a&nbsp;doormat in&nbsp;front of&nbsp;an&nbsp;FSB office. Minor&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/balazejkin-egor-danielevich\/\">Yegor Balazeikin<\/a>, detained while still a&nbsp;schoolboy, was sentenced to&nbsp;six years for attempted terrorism after two alleged attempts to&nbsp;arson a&nbsp;military enlistment office that produced no&nbsp;flame\u2014one of&nbsp;which went unnoticed until he&nbsp;himself mentioned it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One of&nbsp;the gravest and increasingly common charges is&nbsp;high treason (Article 275). Grounds now include not only dubious and poorly evidenced claims of&nbsp;cooperation with Ukrainian intelligence or&nbsp;transmission of&nbsp;open-source data, or&nbsp;intent to&nbsp;join Ukrainian forces, but virtually any financial transfer to&nbsp;Ukraine, arbitrarily interpreted as&nbsp;providing material support to&nbsp;a&nbsp;foreign actor acting against Russia\u2019s security. Schoolteacher&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/klyuka-daniil-vladimirovich\/\">Daniil Klyuka<\/a>&nbsp;received 20 years for transfers to&nbsp;relatives in&nbsp;Ukraine, with the added charge of&nbsp;financing terrorism (Part 1.1 of&nbsp;Article 205.1) on&nbsp;the grounds that the money was supposedly destined for the Azov regiment. Train driver&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/demchuk-ostap-bogdanovich\/\">Ostap Demchuk<\/a>&nbsp;from Amur Region was sentenced to&nbsp;13 years for transfers to&nbsp;his mother in&nbsp;Ukraine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Long sentences are routinely imposed even for tiny sums: transgender activist&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/kisliczyn-mark-alekseevich\/\">Mark Kislitsyn<\/a>&nbsp;from Moscow received 12 years for $&nbsp;10; Tomsk student&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/laletina-tatiana-valerevna\/\">Tatiana Laletina<\/a>&nbsp;9 years for $&nbsp;30; Khabarovsk resident&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/parshina-tamara-mihajlovna\/\">Tamara Parshina<\/a>&nbsp;8 years for a&nbsp;similar amount; Moscow&nbsp;IT specialist&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/slobodchikova-nina-mihajlovna\/\">Nina Slobodchikova<\/a>&nbsp;12 years for $&nbsp;62; and Sverdlovsk Region mechanic&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/en\/figurant\/varaksin-evgenij-alekseevich\/\">Yevgeny Varaksin<\/a>&nbsp;12 years for the equivalent of&nbsp;about $&nbsp;22.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Particular attention should be&nbsp;drawn to&nbsp;the new Article 275.1 on&nbsp;\u00abconfidential cooperation with a&nbsp;foreign state, international or&nbsp;foreign organization.\u00bb It&nbsp;punishes the establishment or&nbsp;maintenance of&nbsp;confidential relations aimed at&nbsp;assisting activities \u00abknowingly directed against the security of&nbsp;the Russian Federation.\u00bb Almost any non-public interaction can be&nbsp;deemed confidential cooperation, and the \u00abknowingly directed\u00bb element is&nbsp;usually presumed rather than proven for any foreign contact. Often dubbed \u00abtreason-lite,\u00bb the article carries up&nbsp;to&nbsp;8 years (versus potential life imprisonment under Article 275), requires no&nbsp;proof of&nbsp;harm, and demands far less evidentiary rigor. It&nbsp;is&nbsp;frequently used when fabricating a&nbsp;full treason case proves too cumbersome. By&nbsp;the end of&nbsp;2025, over 100 people had already been convicted under this provision.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;2024, the overall acquittal rate in&nbsp;Russia stood at&nbsp;around 0.25 percent. For politically motivated cases, acquittals have been virtually nonexistent for years. Courts routinely accept prosecution evidence without question. In&nbsp;political trials, common \u00abevidence\u00bb includes testimony from secret witnesses, unsubstantiated FSB certificates claiming anonymous contacts belong to&nbsp;Ukrainian intelligence, and commissioned linguistic expert reports that almost invariably find the required elements\u2014calls to&nbsp;terrorism or&nbsp;extremism, justification of&nbsp;terrorism, incitement to&nbsp;hatred, etc.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/analytics\/pytki-v-politicheski-motivirovannyh-ugolovnyh-presledovaniyah\/\">Reports of&nbsp;torture<\/a>&nbsp;in&nbsp;politically motivated cases have surged, most often immediately after arrest to&nbsp;extract confessions. In&nbsp;terrorism cases, this has become near-systematic. When defendants retract confessions in&nbsp;court, judges typically ignore the retraction and base convictions on&nbsp;the initial statements obtained during investigation. Convictions resting solely or&nbsp;primarily on&nbsp;subsequently disavowed confessions are commonplace.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Another disturbing trend is&nbsp;the growing opacity of&nbsp;the judicial system: more trials are held in&nbsp;closed sessions, verdicts are increasingly withheld from public court websites, and even defendants\u2019 names and hearing dates are frequently concealed in&nbsp;political cases.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Judicial decisions have also acquired a&nbsp;distinctly ideological flavor. In&nbsp;political sentences\u2014including those for terrorism or&nbsp;treason\u2014courts often cite as&nbsp;evidence of&nbsp;guilt the defendant\u2019s negative attitude toward the authorities and the president\u2019s policies, disapproval of&nbsp;the \u00abspecial military operation,\u00bb participation in&nbsp;protests, or&nbsp;subscription to&nbsp;opposition channels and accounts.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Functionality of&nbsp;Repression and Potential for Further Growth<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The combination of&nbsp;new punitive legislation and a&nbsp;far more \u00abflexible\u00bb approach by&nbsp;investigators and courts have produced a&nbsp;dramatic expansion in&nbsp;the scale of&nbsp;repression.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As&nbsp;noted, the Memorial list of&nbsp;political prisoners represents only a&nbsp;lower bound. Our&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/airtable.com\/appvNc945GeBZzbVI\/shr3YiaVWxkRrYuhe\/tblgvypyXZg1UKtYf\">estimate<\/a>&nbsp;places the total number of&nbsp;individuals deprived of&nbsp;liberty by&nbsp;Russian authorities in&nbsp;connection with clearly politically motivated and unlawful prosecutions at&nbsp;no&nbsp;fewer than 4,800.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This figure excludes thousands of&nbsp;Ukrainian civilian hostages held without legal basis in&nbsp;incommunicado conditions but includes Ukrainian citizens (including POWs) facing criminal charges. Repression against Ukrainians is&nbsp;markedly&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memorialcenter.org\/ru\/analytics\/ukraina-voennye-prestupleniya-rossijskih-agressorov-plennye\">more brutal<\/a>:&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.hrw.org\/ru\/news\/2025\/12\/11\/russias-systematic-torture-of-ukrainian-pows\">torture<\/a>&nbsp;is&nbsp;closer to&nbsp;the norm, and rights violations are far&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/zmina.ua\/en\/publication-en\/denial-of-the-right-to-a-fair-trial-as-an-international-crime-during-russias-war-against-ukraine-context-practice-law-and-prospects\/\">more extensive<\/a>&nbsp;than those experienced by&nbsp;Russian citizens on&nbsp;Russian territory. Of&nbsp;the estimated 4,800, roughly one-quarter are Ukrainian citizens and at&nbsp;least 3,600 are Russian citizens.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The trajectory of&nbsp;politically motivated imprisonments shows that, after an&nbsp;initial surge following the full-scale invasion, the rate of&nbsp;new prosecutions on&nbsp;Russia\u2019s internationally recognized territory has stabilized over the past two years. However, given the length of&nbsp;sentences, the total number incarcerated continues to&nbsp;rise steadily. In&nbsp;2025, approximately five people per day face criminal charges with clear signs of&nbsp;political motivation. Around 72 percent are remanded in&nbsp;custody either during investigation or&nbsp;upon conviction\u2014a historical record.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Amid relatively stable intake, a&nbsp;key trend has been a&nbsp;structural shift toward graver charges. By&nbsp;the third quarter of&nbsp;2025, roughly 45 percent of&nbsp;new politically motivated cases fell under \u00abterrorist\u00bb articles (including not only terrorism proper but calls, justification, participation, and aiding terrorist activity)\u2014another historical peak.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>An&nbsp;even sharper increase is&nbsp;seen in&nbsp;crimes against state security, primarily treason and confidential cooperation with foreigners. In&nbsp;2025 their combined share rose from 16 percent to&nbsp;29 percent of&nbsp;all new political cases. Treason alone became the single most common charge, accounting for around 21 percent of&nbsp;new cases. The annual number of&nbsp;new treason prosecutions rose from no&nbsp;more than 13 in&nbsp;2021 to&nbsp;at&nbsp;least 328 in&nbsp;the first nine months of&nbsp;2025.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This dynamic can be&nbsp;explained by&nbsp;two factors. First, the regime seeks to&nbsp;maximize intimidation and stigmatization of&nbsp;disloyal citizens through the most frightening labels\u2014treason and terrorism. Second, the FSB\u2019s role in&nbsp;political repression has grown dramatically: crimes against state security fall exclusively within its investigative remit, while terrorism cases can and often do&nbsp;as&nbsp;well.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Charges under the relatively new \u00abanti-war\u00bb articles on&nbsp;discrediting the military and spreading \u00abfakes\u00bb (as&nbsp;well as&nbsp;traditional \u00abextremist\u00bb articles) are gradually being supplanted by&nbsp;accusations of&nbsp;public calls to&nbsp;terrorism and its justification\u2014these heavier provisions are becoming the primary instrument for suppressing free speech. In&nbsp;2025 alone, the share of&nbsp;the two flagship anti-war articles fell from 7 percent to&nbsp;4 percent, while calls to&nbsp;or&nbsp;justification of&nbsp;terrorism rose from 14 percent to&nbsp;18 percent. This trend has been evident for at&nbsp;least the past two years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Thus, charges that even many regime loyalists recognize as&nbsp;tools for stifling dissent are being replaced by&nbsp;terrorism accusations whose political underpinning is&nbsp;far less obvious to&nbsp;the general public without close examination.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In&nbsp;summary, political repression in&nbsp;recent years has clearly intensified: sentences have lengthened, convictions under the gravest articles (treason, terrorism) have reached record highs, and the victim count continues to&nbsp;grow. At&nbsp;the same time, measured as&nbsp;a&nbsp;proportion of&nbsp;the population directly subjected to&nbsp;politically motivated criminal prosecution, the scale remains comparatively moderate\u2014especially relative to&nbsp;Belarus (where the per capita rate of&nbsp;political imprisonment is&nbsp;significantly higher) and, even more so, the Stalinist period of&nbsp;the 1930s-1950s.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This scale likely reflects the \u00abfunctional\u00bb nature of&nbsp;current repression: it&nbsp;provides the regime with adequate control at&nbsp;minimal cost. Several thousand imprisoned for political reasons (plus thousands facing criminal charges without incarceration and tens of&nbsp;thousands prosecuted administratively) suffice under present conditions. Several factors facilitate this efficiency. First, the modern information environment vastly amplifies the deterrent effect of&nbsp;even targeted repression. The variety, unpredictability, and broad social and geographic reach of&nbsp;charges foster a&nbsp;widespread mindset of&nbsp;keeping one\u2019s head down. Second, society has been conditioned over 25 years of&nbsp;deepening authoritarianism to&nbsp;accept the status quo as&nbsp;inevitable and without alternative.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Mass emigration of&nbsp;hundreds of&nbsp;thousands of&nbsp;the least loyal citizens has further reduced internal pressure. To&nbsp;minimize their influence and stigmatize them domestically, the regime has expanded in&nbsp;absentia political convictions. Their exact number is&nbsp;unknown, but the legal framework and pace are both growing. One illustrative case is&nbsp;the in&nbsp;absentia sentence that entered force in&nbsp;November 2025 against the author of&nbsp;this article: six years for alleged public justification of&nbsp;terrorism\u2014for condemning the unlawful prosecution of&nbsp;Ukrainian POWs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There are strong grounds to&nbsp;believe that the current level of&nbsp;repression, broadly commensurate with the challenges the regime currently faces, retains considerable room for expansion. Should new serious threats emerge, the authorities stand ready to&nbsp;exploit that potential swiftly. The unprecedented crackdown following the January 2024&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/memopzk.org\/dossier\/bajmakskoe-delo\/\">protest<\/a>&nbsp;in&nbsp;Bashkortostan\u2019s Baymak\u2014now involving around 80 defendants, with trials ongoing\u2014serves as&nbsp;a&nbsp;clear demonstration.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It&nbsp;should be&nbsp;noted, finally, that conditions on&nbsp;occupied Ukrainian territories are far worse. While Russia proper saw roughly 1.4 new politically motivated criminal defendants per 100,000 population in&nbsp;2024\u22122025 (relatively stable), the figure for occupied Crimea in&nbsp;2025 reached 5.3, and for the remaining occupied regions (Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson oblasts) 10.2\u2014approximately 3.8 and 7 times higher than in&nbsp;Russia, respectively. Unlike inside the Russian Federation, the number of&nbsp;new political cases on&nbsp;occupied territories rose 30\u221250 percent in&nbsp;2025 compared to&nbsp;the previous year.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","class_list":["post-56547","analytics","type-analytics","status-publish","hentry","analytics-type-overview"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>From \u00abDiscrediting\u00bb the Military to\u00a0High Treason and Terrorism - Political prisoners support. 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