Accessibility links

Breaking News
Ukrainian Security Service officers detain Major General Valeriy Shaytanov on suspicion of high treason and terrorism in Kyiv on April 14.
Ukrainian Security Service officers detain Major General Valeriy Shaytanov on suspicion of high treason and terrorism in Kyiv on April 14.

Ukraine Live Blog: Zelenskiy's Challenges (Archive)

An archive of our recent live blogging of the crisis in Ukraine's east.

12:20 5.3.2020

12:00 5.3.2020

10:35 5.3.2020

A thought-provoking read...

10:26 5.3.2020

10:23 5.3.2020

Court In Russia-Controlled Crimea Sends Jehovah's Witness To Prison For 6 Years

Serhiy Filatov had to move from mainland Ukraine, where the Jehovah's Witnesses are legal, to Crimea to take care of his ill daughter.
Serhiy Filatov had to move from mainland Ukraine, where the Jehovah's Witnesses are legal, to Crimea to take care of his ill daughter.

DZHANKOY, Ukraine -- A Russian-controlled court in Ukraine's Crimea has sentenced a Jehovah's Witness to six years in prison for being a member of an extremist group.

The Dzhankoy district court on March 5 found Serhiy Filatov guilty of being a member of the religious group and handed down the sentence on the same day, the Jehovah's Witnesses said in an email.

According to the group, Filatov is the religious organization's first member sentenced in Russia-annexed Crimea, and the 30th Jehovah's Witness convicted in modern Russia and Crimea since 2017. Ten of the convicted have received prison sentences.

Russia officially banned the Jehovah's Witnesses in April 2017 and deemed it an "extremist organization," a designation the U.S. State Department has characterized as "wrong."

Filatov, a father of four, had to move from continental Ukraine, where the Jehovah's Witnesses are legal, to Dhankoy to take care of his ill daughter, his supporters told Crimean Solidarity, a rights group that has members in Crimea and other parts of Ukraine.

Crimea has been controlled by Moscow since March 2014 after Russia forcibly annexed the peninsula, sending in troops and staging a referendum denounced as illegitimate by at least 100 countries after Moscow-friendly Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted amid a wave of public protests.

Also, on March 5, another court in the Crimean city of Yalta, convicted another member of the religious group, Artyom Gerasimov, of organizing extremist activities and fined him 400,000 rubles.

The group says the case against Gerasimov stemmed from his bible studies sessions with others.

The Jehovah's Witnesses have been viewed with suspicion in Russia for decades due to the views of its members about military service, voting, and government authority in general.

Since the faith was outlawed in Russia, nine Jehovah's Witnesses have been imprisoned in Russia. They include Danish citizen Dennis Christensen, who was sentenced in February 2019 to six years in prison in the western city of Oryol.

The charges against Christensen have been condemned by rights groups in Russia and abroad.

With reporting by the Crimean Desk of RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service
09:08 5.3.2020

09:08 5.3.2020

09:07 5.3.2020

09:07 5.3.2020

08:45 5.3.2020

The first tweet of a pretty extensive Twitter thread about this guy (click on the tweet if you want to see more):

Load more

XS
SM
MD
LG