Crimean Tatar activist Osmanov was sentenced to 20 years in a colony
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The court in Rostov-on-Don sentenced Crimean Tatar activist Ansar Osmanov to 20 years in a penal colony. He was found guilty of organizing the activities of a terrorist organization and preparing for a violent seizure of power. According to the FSB, Osmanov belonged to the Islamic movement Hizb-ut Tahrir.
The court imposed a sentence higher than that demanded by the prosecutor’s office: the prosecution asked for 18 years of imprisonment, Kavkaz.Realii reports.
The investigation considers that at the meetings of the movement, “intentions to change the political system and state structure of Russia with the help of propaganda, as well as waging war against opponents of the ideas of a terrorist organization, were discussed.”
As Osmanov’s lawyer Emil Kurbedinov claims, such a cruel punishment is Osmanov’s revenge by the Russian special services for his active activities. Osmanov of the “Crimean solidarity” movement regularly visited courts in politically motivated cases against the Crimean Tatars. Before his arrest, he worked as a woodcarver. Now five children are growing up in his family.
- “Hizb ut-Tahrir” is an international religious movement of the Islamist variety. It is legal in many countries of the world, but since 2003 it has been banned in Russia, where it is recognized as a terrorist organization.
- Since 2014, more than 70 people have been arrested in connection with the Hizb ut-Tahrir case. The Memorial Human Rights Center considers their persecution to be politically motivated: in 2014, the Crimean Tatars opposed the annexation of Crimea to Russia.
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