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🗓️ 29 May 2024
⏱️ 53 minutes
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The Russian Marxist Boris Kagarlitsky last spoke to us shortly after his release from nearly five months in prison. He was arrested on far-fetched charges of "justifying terrorism" for ironic remarks he made on his social media channel after the explosion on the Crimean Bridge in 2022. Boris was freed after a military court handed him a fine in December 2023, and spoke to Suzi two weeks later in the interview you are about to hear.
Barely two months after Boris’s release there was an unexpected appeal trial at a military court in February 2024, and the prosecutors overturned the December verdict that freed him, citing "excessive leniency." He was sentenced to five years in a general regime penal colony and whisked from the courtroom to prison. Now three months later, after several moves, Boris has arrived at his final place of detention, Penal Colony No. 4 in Torzhok, 155 miles northwest of Moscow.
Once again, Boris requires our solidarity. His final appeal will be heard on June 5 by Russia’s Supreme Court. An international petition has garnered more than 16,000 signatures calling for his release and all anti-war political prisoners. President Putin’s government is using anti-terror laws to step up its already draconian repression of dissent at home and in Russian-occupied parts of Ukraine. More than 20,000 Russians have been detained and more than 1,000 have been put on trial.
In an open letter from prison, Boris wrote, "Under today’s conditions, when political action and self-organization in our country have become extremely difficult, helping our co-thinkers who have been imprisoned is not just humanitarian activity, but also an important political gesture, an act of practical solidarity." He has brought his incisive analysis to these airwaves for more than three decades.
The petition demanding the immediate and unconditional release of Boris Kagarlitsky and all other anti-war prisoners can be found at freeboris.info. This interview was originally broadcast in January.
Jacobin Radio with Suzi Weissman features conversations with leading thinkers and activists, with a focus on labor, the economy, and protest movements.
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0:00.0 | The Welcome. Welcome to Jacobin Radio. I'm Susie Weisman Radio. I'm Susie Weisman. On today's show we feature the |
0:29.4 | latest interview we did with Boris Kagrulitzky after his release from nearly five months in |
0:35.1 | prison on baseless far-fetched charges of justifying terrorism for ironic remarks |
0:41.2 | he made on his social media channel after the explosion on the Crimean |
0:45.6 | Bridge in 2022. He was freed after a military court handed him a fine in December and he did the interview you were about to hear two weeks later. |
0:56.5 | But in February 2024 there was an unexpected appeal trial at a military court where the prosecutors overturned the December verdict |
1:06.4 | that freed him citing excessive leniency. |
1:10.4 | Kaglitzky was sentenced to five years in a general regime penal colony and whisked from the courtroom to prison. |
1:17.6 | Now three months later after several moves Boris has arrived at his final place of detention, penal colony number four in |
1:26.3 | Torjak, 155 miles northwest of Moscow. |
1:31.0 | Once again, Boris requires our solidarity. |
1:34.6 | His final appeal will be heard on June 5th by Russia's Supreme Court. |
1:40.2 | An international petition has garnered more than 15,000 signatures calling for the release of |
1:45.1 | Kagulitsky and all anti-war political prisoners. |
1:49.4 | President Putin's regime is using anti-terror laws to step up its already draconian repression of |
1:55.0 | descent at home and in Russian occupied parts of Ukraine. More than 20,000 |
2:00.7 | Russians have been detained and more than a thousand have been put on trial. |
2:04.9 | In an open letter from prison, Kagalitzki wrote, under today's conditions when political action |
2:11.0 | and self-organization in our country have become extremely difficult, |
2:15.0 | helping our co-thinkers who have been imprisoned is not just humanitarian activity, |
2:20.4 | but also an important political gesture, an act of practical solidarity. |
2:25.4 | Boris Kagalitzky has brought his incisive analysis to these airwaves for more |
... |
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