Oleg Orlov: A tenacious dissident since Soviet times

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Veteran Russian dissident Oleg Orlov, who has been freed after spending more than 6 months in prison, has been a campaigner since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.

The 71-year-old stayed on in Russia to fight for human rights and protest against the offensive in Ukraine even as other campaigners fled the growing repression.

A court in February found him guilty of “discrediting” the Russian army under legislation the Kremlin has used to stifle critics of the Ukraine offensive and sentenced him to two and a half years in prison.

He was sent to a penal colony in the southern city of Syzran on the Volga River.

In July, he lost an appeal against his sentence.

In court, he quoted a passage from a prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials against Nazi German war criminals, which he said could equally be used to describe Russia’s judicial system.

“They distorted, perverted and in the end achieved the total destruction of justice and law. They made the judicial system an integral part of the dictatorship,” he told the court.

“These words can be uttered now by any Russian political prisoner.”

Repression has intensified since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops into Ukraine two years ago.

The bespectacled dissident — previously unknown outside activist circles — became one of the loudest critics of the offensive and of the Kremlin.

Orlov even used his own first trial, between June and October 2023, as a platform against the conflict in Ukraine, denouncing a “war that destroys the future” during hearings.

The Kremlin has also branded him a foreign agent, a label reminiscent of the term “enemies of the people” of the Soviet era.

– No regrets –

“I regret none of it,” said Orlov, speaking in a slightly trembling voice in court before the verdict.

Perseverance was the trademark of the dissident who has denounced the authoritarian drift of his country ever since Soviet troops were sent to Afghanistan more than four decades ago.

“Repent? Admit my guilt in front of the judges? It would be like denying my whole life,” he told AFP in an interview shortly before his latest trial.

He said he felt a duty to resist, just like the “illustrious predecessors” who inspired him and led him to activism.

Born in 1953 to an engineer father and philologist mother, Orlov studied biology at Moscow State University.

He soon delved into political activism and handed out leaflets opposing the Soviet offensive in Afghanistan.

In the late 1980s he joined the then-fledgling organisation Memorial.

The NGO was documenting and preserving the memory of millions of victims of Soviet repression to keep Russia from repeating the same mistakes.

In parallel, it was also investigating human rights violations in the chaos of the 1990s.

As part of that mission, Orlov was an observer of many of the conflicts that spilled over when the USSR collapsed, including in Moldova, Central Asia and in the Caucasus.

– Taken hostage –

He was particularly active in Chechnya, where Moscow’s troops and Chechen separatists waged two wars between 1994 and 2000.

In 1995, he volunteered to take the place of nearly 2,000 people held hostage by Chechen separatists in a hospital in southwest Russia.

The hostage crisis marked a turning point in the first Chechen war of 1994-1996.

Orlov was taken hostage again by a group of masked gunmen in Ingushetia, bordering Chechnya, in 2007.

The captives, including Orlov, were beaten and threatened with execution in a field on the edge of town, then left barefoot in the snow.

He spent the following years at Memorial, trying to preserve its work despite an increasingly hostile Russian state.

Just a few weeks before the attack on Ukraine, Memorial was dissolved by the Russian courts.

The door of Orlov’s Moscow flat was vandalised with the letter “Z” used by supporters of the offensive in Ukraine.

Orlov vowed to continue the fight even if, by his own admission, his employees now had to work “in semi-clandestinity”.

“There is no choice. We have to continue the fight,” he said.

bur/giv

 

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