In Yekaterinburg's Svetly microdistrict on the evening of April 13, two girls were detained for replacing price tags in the Magnit supermarket with anti-war leaflets. This was reported to It's My City by human rights activist Sergei Zykov.
The girls' names are Victoria Shishkova and Karina Matych, Kommersant clarifies. Both were taken to police station No. 13 at Khimmash and released at around 1 a.m. on April 14 with protocols on “discrediting” the Russian military (Part 1 of Article 20.3.3 of the Code of Administrative Offenses).
According to the protocol published by Vecherniye Vedomosti, the girls, the day before the arrest, on the evening of April 12, instead of price tags in Magnit, they put leaflets with the words “Stop the war” and data on the Russian military killed during the invasion.
The girls were held by the police for seven hours without food, their phones and cameras were confiscated, representatives of the Yekaterinburg POC said in a conversation with It's My City. Member of the PMC Lyubov Shadyeva said that the girls in the department “were under psychological pressure”, they “called an ambulance immediately after leaving”. According to 66.ru, the police threatened the girls and “called them fools.” alt=»1″ />Pay for war. Price tags in Russian stores are exchanged for anti-war leaflets — in St. Petersburg, the court arrested the musician for this in the case of «fake» about the army
Lawyer Fyodor Akchermyshev added that the girls in OP-13 were interviewed by specially arrived employees of the Center for Combating Extremism, although the report lists district police officer Alan Kuchiev as the compiler.
Due to the replacement of price tags in stores, several activists have already been detained in Tula, Kazan and St. Petersburg, they have also drawn up protocols on “discrediting” the army. A resident of Smolensk, Vladimir Zavyalov, and an artist from St. Petersburg, Sasha Skochilenko, were prosecuted under the article on “fakes” about the army (207.3 of the Criminal Code). Skochilenko was sent to jail yesterday.