EU country drops genocide justification case against Russian activist

8 Dec, 2024 14:11 / Updated 2 weeks ago
Prosecutors have withdrawn charges over a video clip marking Victory Day, a local activist has said

Latvian authorities have discarded a case against a Russian activist for alleged justification of genocide, the woman, Elena Osipova, has said.

According to media reports, Osipova was being prosecuted over a video marking the anniversary of the Soviet Union’s defeat of Nazi Germany in the Second World War, which she published on social media ahead of Victory Day on May 9.

In June, the activist, who heads the local branch of the Latvian Russian Union (LRU) in the city of Liepaja, said that she had been summoned for questioning by Latvian security services and told that her actions could be classified as justification of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes.

Latvia, which is putting a lot of effort into distancing itself from its Soviet past, has banned the use of symbols linked to the USSR, including its flag, coat of arms, and anthem.
Osipova wrote on her Telegram channel on Saturday that the case against her has been closed “due to the absence of the elements of a crime.”

The activist said that the clip in question, which was made by her husband, Evgeny Osipov, “has been fully cleared. Watch, re-post and sing along.”

The lyrics of the song featured in the video urge listeners to preserve the memory of the Soviet Union’s victory in the Second World War, which in Russia is known as the Great Patriotic War, and call on those listening to fight fascism whenever it is encountered.

The clip features images of World War II memorials in Latvia, footage of Osipova and her associates holding red flags – without any Soviet symbols on them – and archive videos from the fighting with the Nazis between 1941 and 1945.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in late October that ‘Russophobia’ in Latvia had reached “a qualitatively new level.”

According to the spokeswoman, it can be seen in the clampdown on the rights of Russian speakers, the ban on education in Russian language, the persecution of those who fought Nazism (namely veterans of World War II), the demolition of monuments to the liberators of Latvia from the Nazi invaders, and in the marches of Latvian SS veterans and the glorification of Nazi criminals.

Russia is planning to take Latvia to the International Court of Justice over those violations and has already submitted pre-trial claims to the authorities in Riga, Zakharova said.