The Prague Post - Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, fined over peace placard

EUR -
AED 4.339
AFN 80.331134
ALL 96.644491
AMD 452.381307
ANG 2.115071
AOA 1083.287196
ARS 1740.605308
AUD 1.775914
AWG 2.129362
AZN 2.007475
BAM 1.95165
BBD 2.378842
BDT 143.804209
BGN 1.951647
BHD 0.445394
BIF 3476.086928
BMD 1.181338
BND 1.507993
BOB 8.1623
BRL 6.269005
BSD 1.181088
BTN 103.703819
BWP 16.74474
BYN 4.001092
BYR 23154.223887
BZD 2.375639
CAD 1.627033
CDF 3337.279848
CHF 0.931838
CLF 0.028672
CLP 1124.799338
CNY 8.391812
CNH 8.390476
COP 4580.4489
CRC 595.234269
CUC 1.181338
CUP 31.305456
CVE 110.452434
CZK 24.323036
DJF 209.947395
DKK 7.464638
DOP 73.834613
DZD 152.565736
EGP 56.870432
ERN 17.720069
ETB 171.169583
FJD 2.6423
FKP 0.865273
GBP 0.866446
GEL 3.187814
GGP 0.865273
GHS 14.482907
GIP 0.865273
GMD 85.056719
GNF 10230.38653
GTQ 9.04776
GYD 247.124377
HKD 9.187401
HNL 30.970144
HRK 7.534694
HTG 154.551356
HUF 390.207717
IDR 19434.190672
ILS 3.95043
IMP 0.865273
INR 103.851479
IQD 1547.309736
IRR 49690.024025
ISK 142.81225
JEP 0.865273
JMD 189.517003
JOD 0.837551
JPY 173.609419
KES 152.982361
KGS 103.308286
KHR 4734.803186
KMF 490.254899
KPW 1063.18318
KRW 1631.085339
KWD 0.360485
KYD 0.984386
KZT 640.030482
LAK 25575.966986
LBP 105788.813939
LKR 356.462004
LRD 209.07135
LSL 20.48452
LTL 3.488183
LVL 0.714579
LYD 6.396908
MAD 10.587739
MDL 19.472159
MGA 5189.382396
MKD 61.409416
MMK 2480.394636
MNT 4249.779618
MOP 9.461142
MRU 47.158559
MUR 53.467124
MVR 18.0862
MWK 2051.984198
MXN 21.674185
MYR 4.948035
MZN 75.499386
NAD 20.484302
NGN 1767.588505
NIO 43.467569
NOK 11.597975
NPR 165.913195
NZD 1.981021
OMR 0.454213
PAB 1.181183
PEN 4.109887
PGK 4.937876
PHP 67.146091
PKR 332.56182
PLN 4.252994
PYG 8428.078181
QAR 4.300956
RON 5.066167
RSD 117.189851
RUB 99.224188
RWF 1712.196803
SAR 4.431455
SBD 9.707131
SCR 16.828551
SDG 710.588527
SEK 10.984554
SGD 1.506448
SHP 0.928346
SLE 27.536971
SLL 24772.070544
SOS 673.867061
SRD 45.172588
STD 24451.310524
STN 24.448013
SVC 10.335023
SYP 15359.49754
SZL 20.532989
THB 37.578458
TJS 11.132922
TMT 4.146496
TND 3.41893
TOP 2.766815
TRY 48.761026
TTD 8.012961
TWD 35.561227
TZS 2917.9048
UAH 48.705641
UGX 4134.208845
USD 1.181338
UYU 47.492628
UZS 14511.24821
VES 189.306312
VND 31157.788522
VUV 140.118686
WST 3.135763
XAF 654.617636
XAG 0.028352
XAU 0.000323
XCD 3.192625
XCG 2.128673
XDR 0.812696
XOF 654.565105
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.98924
ZAR 20.538564
ZMK 10633.462711
ZMW 27.669388
ZWL 380.390339
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.85

    -0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    15.25

    -1.64%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    24.42

    +0.12%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    11.66

    -0.94%

  • BCC

    -1.9300

    80.46

    -2.4%

  • SCS

    -0.1500

    16.73

    -0.9%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    24.52

    +0.24%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.15

    +0.38%

  • RIO

    -0.4500

    62.99

    -0.71%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    47.09

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    23.49

    +0.26%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    40.36

    +0.77%

  • AZN

    0.1300

    77.69

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    0.2400

    56.03

    +0.43%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    34.3

    -0.38%

Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, fined over peace placard
Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, fined over peace placard / Photo: Olga MALTSEVA - AFP

Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, fined over peace placard

Lyudmila Vasilyeva, 84, survived the Siege of Leningrad in World War II as a child. Now, the Russian pensioner has been prosecuted for calling for peace in Ukraine and says she feels "hurt" over what her country has become.

Text size:

Like thousands of people since Russia launched its military offensive in February 2022, she has been charged with "discrediting" the armed forces. On Friday a court in Saint Petersburg -- once Leningrad -- fined her 10,000 rubles ($125).

Her offence was holding a handwritten placard reading: "People, let's stop the war. We are responsible for peace on the planet Earth. With love, Lyudmila Vasilyeva, child of the Leningrad blockade."

Speaking to AFP earlier this week, Vasilyeva spoke of her anguish over the state of her country.

"Bitterness. That's what I feel. I'm unbearably hurt, unbearably hurt for the country," she told AFP in an interview in her Saint Petersburg apartment.

Dressed in a burgundy cardigan with patterned trim, she displayed the placard at the centre of her legal troubles.

In March she had stood on the street holding it in front of her.

That protest -- more than three years into Russia's offensive on Ukraine and an escalating domestic crackdown -- was enough for prosecutors to bring charges against her.

Her administrative fine was relatively lenient compared to the years-long jail sentences handed out to some who have criticised the Ukraine offensive in stronger terms and faced criminal punishment.

Russia's military campaign has left tens of thousands dead -- including many Russian soldiers -- and seen Moscow's army extend its control to around a fifth of Ukraine's territory.

At home, Moscow introduced military censorship and has escalated a crackdown on those who criticise the offensive.

Amnesty International, which Russia outlawed earlier this week, said laws against "discrediting" the army have "been used to criminalise the expression of any opinion critical" of the military campaign.

- 'Always' with the weak -

Vasilyeva is unapologetic.

"I have always been someone who is not indifferent, from childhood. I have always been on the side of the weak," she said.

Two elegant cats frolicked among her books.

On the wall hung a portrait of her mother, who survived the siege with Lyudmila and her four siblings.

"Mum always said: 'We will get through everything, as long as there is no war'," Vasilyeva said.

The Siege of Leningrad -- the Soviet-era name of Saint Petersburg -- began in September 1941 and lasted 872 days.

Between 600,000 and 1.5 million people died, most from hunger, before the Red Army eventually broke the siege in January 1944.

It has totemic importance for many Russians, including President Vladimir Putin, whose brother died in the siege and who was himself born in the devastation of post-war Leningrad.

Vasilyeva said her mum "donated blood to get extra food rations".

The experience has influenced how she sees the Ukraine conflict.

"We always talked about peace. Remember what happened so that it never happens again. And what are people saying now?"

Since authorities put down a wave of street protests in February 2022, when Russia launched its offensive, signs of domestic opposition have largely subsided.

Putin says the whole of Russia is behind the campaign, and pro-offensive voices and prosecutors cast dissenters as outliers to be punished and ostracised.

"There are lots of decent people. But they have been scared," said Vasilyeva, a veteran of Russian opposition movements.

She saw the period of perestroika in the late 1980s -- Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms designed to open up and revitalise the stale Soviet system -- as a "window to freedom".

- 'People can influence' -

After the Soviet Union collapsed, she joined the liberal Democratic Choice party, founded by reformist prime minister Yegor Gaidar.

"I have always participated in all opposition meetings," she said proudly.

"Let people live and choose for themselves what they want. Don't impose anything on them, please," she said.

It was in that spirit that she raised her placard, aimed not at the authorities but at her fellow Russians.

"It is the people who can influence and stop (the offensive) and I addressed them," she said.

Russia calls its campaign against Ukraine a "special military operation".

Public calls for peace -- even without explicit references to Ukraine -- are essentially outlawed.

But Vasilyeva, who risks harsher punishments if she is charged again, is unfazed.

"I'm 84 years old. I'm not afraid."

B.Barton--TPP