Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Hurt': Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, charged over peace placard

EUR -
AED 4.23719
AFN 80.135834
ALL 97.798467
AMD 439.918372
ANG 2.064799
AOA 1056.846409
ARS 1360.720244
AUD 1.777509
AWG 2.079657
AZN 1.96193
BAM 1.952774
BBD 2.319306
BDT 140.372501
BGN 1.957511
BHD 0.433329
BIF 3420.200601
BMD 1.153762
BND 1.475314
BOB 7.937701
BRL 6.396923
BSD 1.14872
BTN 98.846843
BWP 15.440077
BYN 3.759175
BYR 22613.741343
BZD 2.307425
CAD 1.567634
CDF 3319.374037
CHF 0.936589
CLF 0.02819
CLP 1068.414555
CNY 8.28586
CNH 8.293676
COP 4771.406987
CRC 579.002869
CUC 1.153762
CUP 30.574701
CVE 110.094415
CZK 24.809301
DJF 204.553057
DKK 7.458935
DOP 67.844878
DZD 150.02854
EGP 57.436382
ERN 17.306435
ETB 154.970782
FJD 2.593946
FKP 0.85007
GBP 0.851719
GEL 3.161735
GGP 0.85007
GHS 11.831668
GIP 0.85007
GMD 81.350521
GNF 9953.577519
GTQ 8.827323
GYD 240.327627
HKD 9.056198
HNL 29.980547
HRK 7.534872
HTG 150.646582
HUF 402.831494
IDR 18805.518075
ILS 4.153792
IMP 0.85007
INR 99.436426
IQD 1504.76845
IRR 48573.393545
ISK 144.001307
JEP 0.85007
JMD 183.915035
JOD 0.818026
JPY 166.746331
KES 148.410047
KGS 100.896972
KHR 4605.863487
KMF 492.083374
KPW 1038.386074
KRW 1578.52003
KWD 0.353305
KYD 0.957217
KZT 589.187089
LAK 24784.597729
LBP 102923.126693
LKR 343.947074
LRD 229.744025
LSL 20.672569
LTL 3.40676
LVL 0.697899
LYD 6.276275
MAD 10.502826
MDL 19.67152
MGA 5186.963107
MKD 61.439803
MMK 2422.55778
MNT 4132.43735
MOP 9.286811
MRU 45.60334
MUR 52.507446
MVR 17.773667
MWK 1991.813802
MXN 21.865408
MYR 4.898299
MZN 73.782996
NAD 20.672569
NGN 1779.608917
NIO 42.274498
NOK 11.43964
NPR 158.154948
NZD 1.917363
OMR 0.443343
PAB 1.14872
PEN 4.146176
PGK 4.798565
PHP 64.714144
PKR 325.655117
PLN 4.270166
PYG 9165.798137
QAR 4.190307
RON 5.019678
RSD 117.018686
RUB 91.852174
RWF 1658.729896
SAR 4.330755
SBD 9.630905
SCR 16.394893
SDG 692.823564
SEK 10.97093
SGD 1.480163
SHP 0.906676
SLE 25.440586
SLL 24193.823059
SOS 656.482819
SRD 43.29833
STD 23880.550451
SVC 10.051426
SYP 15001.047614
SZL 20.65899
THB 37.493823
TJS 11.601824
TMT 4.038168
TND 3.398934
TOP 2.702225
TRY 45.423733
TTD 7.78993
TWD 34.05944
TZS 2969.399091
UAH 47.647972
UGX 4139.585956
USD 1.153762
UYU 47.226825
UZS 14595.385312
VES 117.876459
VND 30084.352323
VUV 137.415593
WST 3.021918
XAF 654.942206
XAG 0.031816
XAU 0.000335
XCD 3.1181
XDR 0.814538
XOF 654.942206
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.767965
ZAR 20.727577
ZMK 10385.260948
ZMW 27.769972
ZWL 371.510994
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

'Hurt': Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, charged over peace placard
'Hurt': Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, charged over peace placard / Photo: Olga MALTSEVA - AFP

'Hurt': Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, charged over peace placard

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

Text size:

Like thousands since Russia launched its military offensive in February 2022, she has been charged with "discrediting" the armed forces and is due in court on Friday.

"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 object at the centre of her legal troubles -- a handwritten placard with a simple message.

"People, let's stop the war. We are responsible for peace on the planet Earth. With love, Lyudmila Vasilyeva, child of the Leningrad blockade."

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

More than three years into Russia's offensive on Ukraine and an escalating domestic crackdown, such an act was enough for prosecutors to bring charges against Vasilyeva.

She faces a fine of up to 50,000 rubles ($620) for the administrative breach -- 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 were frolicking 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 her placard appeal was aimed not at the authorities but at her fellow Russians.

"It is the people who can influence and stop (the war) 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 Vasilyeya, who faces a fine and the possibility of harsher punishments if she is charged again, is unfazed.

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

(G.Gruner--BBZ)