Berliner Boersenzeitung - Russian political prisoners should have got Nobel: Memorial co-founder

EUR -
AED 4.054282
AFN 75.919812
ALL 98.888832
AMD 427.571773
ANG 1.990982
AOA 1022.130981
ARS 1072.630578
AUD 1.611242
AWG 1.986864
AZN 1.8744
BAM 1.956595
BBD 2.230576
BDT 132.013633
BGN 1.956614
BHD 0.416133
BIF 3204.858487
BMD 1.103813
BND 1.432763
BOB 7.634067
BRL 6.04647
BSD 1.104734
BTN 92.743719
BWP 14.612738
BYN 3.61532
BYR 21634.743555
BZD 2.226774
CAD 1.495612
CDF 3167.944301
CHF 0.94014
CLF 0.036839
CLP 1016.490662
CNY 7.777579
CNH 7.780864
COP 4621.512367
CRC 572.724898
CUC 1.103813
CUP 29.251056
CVE 110.309316
CZK 25.340289
DJF 196.727251
DKK 7.459726
DOP 66.426084
DZD 146.734356
EGP 53.369157
ERN 16.557202
ETB 133.505725
FJD 2.429272
FKP 0.840619
GBP 0.840604
GEL 3.013661
GGP 0.840619
GHS 17.49903
GIP 0.840619
GMD 76.162941
GNF 9537.745292
GTQ 8.545433
GYD 231.122851
HKD 8.57221
HNL 27.562823
HRK 7.50484
HTG 145.76724
HUF 401.683784
IDR 17047.184489
ILS 4.199696
IMP 0.840619
INR 92.700295
IQD 1447.18795
IRR 46456.753217
ISK 149.312732
JEP 0.840619
JMD 174.388479
JOD 0.782274
JPY 162.047522
KES 142.465721
KGS 93.228167
KHR 4483.760688
KMF 492.851308
KPW 993.431476
KRW 1470.588463
KWD 0.337723
KYD 0.920674
KZT 533.246642
LAK 24393.910523
LBP 98927.747057
LKR 324.681909
LRD 220.946762
LSL 19.316948
LTL 3.259274
LVL 0.667686
LYD 5.253063
MAD 10.791836
MDL 19.332592
MGA 5012.968498
MKD 61.639763
MMK 3585.143018
MNT 3750.758042
MOP 8.838091
MRU 43.642137
MUR 51.183737
MVR 16.9541
MWK 1915.552201
MXN 21.354872
MYR 4.65841
MZN 70.506103
NAD 19.316948
NGN 1829.758837
NIO 40.655965
NOK 11.70204
NPR 148.39027
NZD 1.77523
OMR 0.42497
PAB 1.104744
PEN 4.115172
PGK 4.397727
PHP 62.216474
PKR 306.725845
PLN 4.309174
PYG 8613.382312
QAR 4.026718
RON 4.977319
RSD 117.025215
RUB 104.301946
RWF 1496.78776
SAR 4.144539
SBD 9.20667
SCR 14.484233
SDG 663.94802
SEK 11.369587
SGD 1.431293
SHP 0.840619
SLE 25.21916
SLL 23146.410394
SOS 631.347918
SRD 34.003521
STD 22846.709756
SVC 9.666927
SYP 2773.364329
SZL 19.307582
THB 36.531253
TJS 11.754375
TMT 3.863347
TND 3.383859
TOP 2.585244
TRY 37.799873
TTD 7.493044
TWD 35.306556
TZS 3009.687575
UAH 45.497966
UGX 4046.625694
USD 1.103813
UYU 46.278592
UZS 14093.725863
VEF 3998622.198817
VES 40.773758
VND 27324.901873
VUV 131.04695
WST 3.087877
XAF 656.214683
XAG 0.034436
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.983111
XDR 0.81532
XOF 656.214683
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.339487
ZAR 19.309453
ZMK 9935.643424
ZMW 29.137442
ZWL 355.427479
  • RBGPF

    -0.8100

    59.99

    -1.35%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.98

    +1.15%

  • GSK

    -1.0800

    38.37

    -2.81%

  • SCS

    -0.2500

    12.62

    -1.98%

  • RELX

    -0.6800

    46.61

    -1.46%

  • BP

    0.0900

    32.46

    +0.28%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.74

    -0.16%

  • NGG

    -1.8100

    66.97

    -2.7%

  • AZN

    -1.6500

    77.93

    -2.12%

  • RIO

    -0.9900

    69.83

    -1.42%

  • BTI

    -0.8600

    35.11

    -2.45%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    9.69

    -0.52%

  • BCC

    -1.2400

    138.29

    -0.9%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.3

    -0.6%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.89

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    -0.6000

    33.84

    -1.77%

Russian political prisoners should have got Nobel: Memorial co-founder
Russian political prisoners should have got Nobel: Memorial co-founder / Photo: Christophe ARCHAMBAULT - AFP

Russian political prisoners should have got Nobel: Memorial co-founder

The Russian rights group Memorial is honoured to have been jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize but it should have gone to political prisoners such as Alexei Navalny, who risk their lives for contesting President Vladimir Putin, the group's co-founder said Friday.

Text size:

Lev Ponomarev, who helped create Memorial in the late 1980s under the perestroika Soviet reform drive, said his group had been "destroyed" as Russia presses its invasion of Ukraine, but was still seeking to continue its work.

"We were just 10 people and we thought everything would start with perestroika. It did not work out that way," Ponomarev told Agence France-Presse in an interview in Paris, where he now has political asylum.

"It is very well deserved and of course when I think of what I thought 30 years ago I am happy," he said.

But Ponomarev said an even better move by the Norwegian peace prize committee would have been to give the award to Navalny, Putin's leading opposition critic and an outspoken anti-corruption figure, or to liberal opposition figures Vladimir Kara-Murza or Ilya Yashin, who are also imprisoned.

"Those who are behind bars are the ones who need to be rewarded every year," Ponomarev said on the sidelines of a forum organised by the exiles group Russie-Libertes (Russia-Freedom) and the Paris City Hall.

"I am compelled now to say that the correct choice would have been to give the Nobel prize -- if they want to support Russia when it is under its harshest regime –- to political figures," he said.

"I mean Navalny, I mean Vladimir Kara-Murza, I mean Ilya Yashin. People who consciously choose that position, knowing they are risking their lives and don't step aside, and solidly say the words that need to be said."

Kara-Murza, who was jailed in April for denouncing the Kremlin's Ukraine offensive, has been charged with high treason, his lawyer said Thursday.

Yashin was jailed in July, also after denouncing Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.

- Organisation 'destroyed' -

Along with Memorial, the Nobel peace prize went to Ukraine's Center for Civil Liberties, which is documenting alleged Russian war crimes against the Ukrainian people, and the detained activist Ales Bialiatski of Belarus.

The Russian authorities ordered the closure of Memorial last year in a move Putin has done nothing to halt, and the pressures against rights advocates has further worsened during the invasion of Ukraine.

Ponomarev, a former physicist, has been at the centre of the Russian rights scene since the fall of the Soviet Union.

In Paris, he continues to push for the release of political prisoners in Russia and remains in close touch with his Memorial colleagues who remain in Russia.

He expressed doubt that at this point the prize would prompt Putin to change his attitude to Memorial, though there was a possibility he could bring up the organisation's status in eventual negotiations with the West.

"Putin is a total and utter global evil and it will not make him relate to Memorial better at all. But if he trades with the West then possibly it could be the issue of some kind of trading," Ponomarev said.

"The organisation is destroyed but there are people who want to preserve the archives and work. Most of Memorial's staff have gone abroad," he said.

Ponomarev, 81, obtained political refugee status in France after fleeing threats of arrest in Russia, but said he hoped his exile would not prove permanent.

"I think I can go back and I am working a lot on that, every day, with this activism. I left because there were threats against me, a criminal case, I could have been jailed," he said.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)