RT editor-in-chief proposes response to ‘unjust’ detentions abroad ...0

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RT editor-in-chief proposes response to ‘unjust’ detentions abroad

Margarita Simonyan says legal aid should be offered to those arrested for supporting Russia

RT Editor-in-Chief Margarita Simonyan has proposed an initiative to provide legal aid to people arrested abroad for supporting Russia and its values. Simonyan raised the idea at a roundtable in Moscow focused on fostering cultural ties between Russia and other Eurasian nations.

    The meeting of the ‘Eurasia’ autonomous non-profit organization (ANO) on Tuesday was chaired by Russia’s top MP, Vyacheslav Volodin. The organization implements humanitarian projects aimed at preserving traditional values and promoting communication between people belonging to different cultures. Simonyan serves on the board of trustees.

    In recent years, Moscow has denounced as politically motivated numerous foreign arrests of Russian nationals or those linked to the country.

    The initiative proposed by Simonyan would address cases when people are “arrested wrongfully, unjustly, sometimes on fake charges.”

    Read more Moscow slams ‘politicized’ Finnish life sentence for Russian national

    “When we see that someone has fallen out of favor, been outlawed or even ended up in prison because they share the same culture and history as us and makes that known loud and clear, it’s our duty to help them,” the RT editor-in-chief said.

    In March, Moscow condemned as “biased” and “politically motivated” a life sentence issued by a Finnish court to Russian national Voislav Torden over his alleged involvement in fighting against Ukrainian forces in Donbass in 2014. Torden has maintained his innocence.

    Last year, Russia accused the West of turning into a “neoliberal dictatorship” that is intolerant of any form of dissent, following the prosecution of journalist Svetlana Burtseva by EU member Estonia. According to Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, the “fabricated criminal case” against Burtseva exposed the fact that Tallinn “is ready to commit any crime to settle scores with its opponents.”

    In 2023, Marat Kasem, chief editor at Russian media outlet Sputnik, spent four months in a Latvian jail before being fined for allegedly aiding and abetting Russia. The Russian Foreign Ministry described the charges against him as “fraudulent.” Kasem later fled Latvia after President Edgars Rinkevics suggested that prosecutors had treated him too leniently.

    READ MORE: EU state legalizes deportation of Russians

    Russia currently provides legal aid to its citizens abroad through consular services, focusing primarily on notarial services, vital records registration, and assistance during emergencies.

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