Tuesday, October 10, 2023

“Women's rights in Russia are in a catastrophic state.” How war changes the lives of women in Russia

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the level of violence against women in Russia has increased, and the state has suddenly taken an interest in their reproductive rights again.


Illustration: Maya Stepanova

Olesia Krivtsova
BARENTS OBSERVER
September 13, 2023

“Because of the war, the level of domestic violence has increased. As a rule, people returning from a war zone are very traumatized physically and psychologically. All of this translates into an increase in crimes against women and children in the family,” Lilia Vezhevatova, coordinator of Feminist Anti-War Resistance, says to The Barents Observer.

Since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, there have been many cases of sexualized and physical violence by military personnel returning from Ukraine.

On August 19, in Murmansk, a man who had recently returned from the war in Ukraine hit a girl in the face. Before that, he walked around a local bar and filmed people, asking them if they “support the special military operation.” When other girls stood up for the beaten woman, the military man said that he would “put them to use”. After the conflict, he filed a complaint with the police on the woman he hit.

In April of this year, a 44-year-old senior sergeant stabbed his wife to death when he was on a short leave from the war in the Nizhny Novgorod region. The military man disposed of his wife while his sons were in the next room. Now he is under arrest, as reported by the press service of the Novosibirsk Court.

In August of this year, 25-year-old Tatyana from Ulan-Ude told reporters that she had been threatened with violence by a man who returned from the war:

“… a man in camouflage approached us, he had some kind of order or badge pinned to his chest, and a huge scar on his face. He was clearly drunk. He wanted to become friends with me, and when I refused, he was terribly indignant. He shouted: “We are writhing in the trenches, shedding blood for you, and here you are still making someone out of yourself!” And all this with obscenities, eyes filled with blood. I was frightened, pulled my friend by the hand, wanted to leave as soon as possible. And he blocked my way, shouting to his friends: “Look, what a sleazebag. I was in the trenches, but she won’t give it to me! Guys, come over here.”

“Women were not protected even before the war, now they are in the most vulnerable position and at risk – violence in society will grow and is already growing. Everyone who returns from the war returns with a crippled psyche, with PTSD. There are risks of facing aggression everywhere – both at home and on the streets of the city,” says Natalya Baranova, an activist of Feminist Anti-War Resistance, in an interview with The Barents Observer. In May 2022, the Russian Ministry of Justice recognized Natalia as a “foreign agent”

Natalia Baranova. Photo: Natalia Baranova

Another incident occurred in the Sverdlovsk region on August 3, 2023. Two soldiers who returned from the war threatened an 18-year-old girl with murder and tried to drown her in a fountain. The men did not like the color of the girl’s hair, as well as that she “looked Jewish”. According to the mother of the victim, during the beatings, the men shouted that they “just returned from the special military operation.”

A terrible incident happened in Novosibirsk. A man, who is believed to be a mercenary with the Wagner PMC, raped two schoolgirls aged 10 and 12. Telegram channel “Baza” cites the words of the girls that “the man was in military uniform and with a skull on the patch”. The man threatened to blow them up with a grenade if they did not obey him, and then led them behind the garages, where he raped them both. The Sovietskiy District Court in Novosibirsk confirmed to reporters that the man had been arrested.

The brutal manifestation of violence against women is not an exception in the Russian Army either. Servicewoman Margarita, who was in the war in Ukraine, shared her experience with journalists from Sever.Realii. According to her, the officers actively abuse their position and force women from the medical company into sexual relations. If women refuse they are forced to sleep outside the tents, starve, and can even be literally shot:

“I saw with my own eyes how a platoon officer shot “his” girlfriend, Svetlana. I don’t know, if they had too much to drink there, or if there was some kind of jealousy. And they presented it as if the Ukrainians had done it. He shot himself in the arm, as if he had been defending her, and after about three weeks he returned from the hospital.”

“It would be wrong to say that the system of subordination exists only in the Russian Federation, it exists in all armies, in all states,” psychologist and human rights activist Valentina Likhoshva said to The Barents Observer. She worked for many years in Murmansk, but now lives in Moscow. “It’s just that the level and depth of this violence can be different. The man himself is subjected to violence, and complaining or saying that he’s a victim of violence is a big blow to male self-consciousness. A survivor of violence is faced with a choice: either to identify with the abuser and then be able to defend himself, or to identify with the victim. A person does not see any third options — this requires working through the trauma and working with specialists, psychologists and psychiatrists for a long time. In our reality, it turns out that all conditions are created to strengthen violent behavior in men.”

Valentina Likhoshva. 
Photo: Thomas Nielsen

“Sibir.Realii” shared statistics based on their assessments: the number of crimes against sexual integrity committed by the Russian military personnel has increased 4.5 times in ten years. In 2023, Russian military courts in 28 regions had 64 cases of sexualized crimes. This is slightly lower than in 2022, but higher than it was before the war, in 2021.

“Our country is a country with an entrenched patriarchy,” Likhoshva said. “If you show violence – you are a man; if you refuse violence in all its forms – you are not a man. We see this in the advertising of military contract service, in the glorification of the military, including glorification of people who’d been serving sentences for violent acts, and then took part in the military conflict.”

“Any attempt to say that women are killed and raped in the war, that women will also suffer from those who return from the war, is suppressed and called “discrediting the army”. They have simply taken away our right to protest and publicity,” Ilona, a 21-year old feminist activist from Arkhangelsk.

After February 2022, the state began persecuting those who raise issues of women’s rights in Russia. A striking example of this was the arrest of theatre director Yevgenia Berkovich and playwright Svetlana Petriychuk on suspicion of “justifying terrorism” this May. The reason for the arrest of women was the play Finist the Brave Falcon. According to court experts, the production promotes “ideology of radical feminism”. The play tells about Russian women who decide to virtually marry adherents of radical Islam and leave for Syria. The production was based on real court verdicts and interrogation records of women.

State and reproductive rights

Russia is suffering enormous losses of its troops, and the state believes that it’s women, whose rights and freedoms are relegated to the background because of the war, should make up for them,” – said Feminist Anti-war Resistance activist Natalya Baranova in an interview with The Barents Observer. She left Russia after the start of the war in Ukraine.

After February 2022, government officials began to pay more and more attention to Russia’s low demographics. The country indeed has demographic challenges. However, the methods that state officials propose as a solution to the problem are debatable.

“A belief has formed that a woman should get an education, then make a career, secure a foundation for herself, and only after that, already approaching, so to speak, such a difficult reproductive age, take care of childbearing,” Minister of Health Murashko said in the State Duma in July, calling this belief a “vicious practice”.

According to Murashko, the opposite should be explained to girls “from the school bench” (that you need to give birth to children before building a career). In addition, the Health Minister proposed “strict control” of abortion drugs be introduced.
The role of the Russian Orthodox Church

The church is also trying to lobby for an abortion ban in Russia. For example, at the beginning of 2023, the most prominent church figure, Patriarch Kirill, once again made a proposal to the State Duma to exclude abortions from the mandatory medical insurance:

“The time has come to legally remove abortion from the list of so-called services that allow medical merchants to profit from the sorrow.”

In January, the head of the patriarchal commission, Fyodor Lukyanov, once again proposed limiting abortions in the country and banning them even if there are medical indications that the child’s health is at risk.

“We believe that artificial termination of pregnancy at the request of a woman should be carried out with the voluntary consent of not only the woman herself, but also that of her husband,” he said. “It is necessary that it be carried out after mandatory pre-abortion psychological counseling, and this should be enshrined in law, as well as after an ultrasound examination and demonstration of the heartbeat of the human fetus.”

“Human life in Russia is not valued, this has to do with the war. And male officials openly say that the mission of a woman is to increase the birth rate of the country,” Natalia Baranova, an activist of Feminist Anti-War Resistance, said about the statements of officials and representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church.

What do women themselves think?

Olesya is a little over forty. She lives in the small military town of Severodvinsk. She is religious and regularly attends church on Sundays. But despite the fact that the Russian Orthodox Church opposes artificial termination of pregnancy, the woman is wary of the prospect of an abortion ban:

“I think that the ban on abortion in Russia will not end in anything good, we have been through this before,” Olesya told The Barents Observer over the phone. “Women will start mutilating themselves and doing illegal abortions.”

Organization “Women for Life” is active in several Russian cities. It was “Women for Life” who initiated the law on “propaganda of abortions” in Mordovia. According to them, abortions are promoted, among other things, by “derogatory statements” about pregnant women and the human fetus, “denial that the embryo and fetus are a living person”, and “negative” arguments about possible social and economic problems for the child and mother who did not have an abortion.

Mari Davtyan, a lawyer and human rights activist who has been providing legal assistance to victims of domestic violence in Russia for many years, has commented on the initiative on her Facebook page.

“First of all, it is still completely unclear what the main law and the amendments to regional legislation on administrative offenses actually read. Only the draft of the law is posted on the website of the State Assembly of the Republic of Mordovia. But in any case, this law, whatever it reads, is of course disgusting both in form and in content. There should not be such a law either at the federal or regional level. Such initiatives are a restriction of the right of women to information pertaining to their health, this is a restriction of the constitutional right to freedom of speech.”

Mari Davtyan. Photo: Marie Davtyan’s Facebook page

The Barents Observer reached out to the official representatives of the Women for Life Foundation through the VKontakte social media platform, but, unfortunately, we got blocked.

However, we managed to talk on the phone with Olga Savina, a Women for Life volunteer. She works as a psychologist in Petrozavodsk and has five children. In her opinion, Russia needs to legislate a ban on abortion, but at the same time, the woman understands that this will lead to illegal surgeries and deaths:

“I would very much like to ban abortion. Maybe after that girls will start to think with their heads and take care of contraception. For my part, the ban on abortion is cool, I am totally in favor of it. But of course I’m worried that after the ban, operations will be done illegally. And perhaps there will even be deaths.”

Olga Savina. Photo from Olga’s “Vkontakte” page

In addition to supporting women who refuse to terminate their pregnancies, Women for Life members visit Russian regions to campaign against abortion:

“It is important to communicate competently with a woman, to surround her with care and attention in order to convince her to keep the child and become a mother, so that northern women would not be afraid to give birth to a second, third and subsequent babies,” a representative of the foundation said at a training for medical specialists and heads of healthcare institutions in Arkhangelsk.

Women for Life President Natalya Moskvitina and Governor of the Arkhangelsk Region Alexander Tsybulsky. 
Photo: Alexander Tsybulsky’s social media page.

Authorities of the Republic of Karelia have also signed a cooperation agreement with the organization. In March of this year, the Ministry of Health of Karelia introduced the “Hello Mom!”project which focuses on several things. The first of them is the training of medical staff to “correctly” support pregnant women during their appointments. The website says that “the doctor can reassure the patient and tell her how the pregnancy will develop, as well as how to prepare for childbirth.”

Natalia Moskvitina, president of the Women for Life Foundation, in Karelia in 2016. Photo: “Women for Life” Vkontakte page

This pro-life foundation is sponsored by the Russian Ministry of Health, the Civic Chamber of the Russian Federation, the Russian Orthodox Church TV channel Spas, as well as the pro-government United Russia party and other organizations directly related to the state.


“Women’s rights in Russia are in a catastrophic state,” Natalya Baranova, an activist with the Feminist Anti-War Resistance, said to The Barents Observer. “In general, you need to understand that the country has a high level of domestic violence, we haven’t adopted laws on domestic violence or workplace harassment, and there is no article in the Criminal Code on sexual violence at work. We are now in a completely unpredictable political context and we see how the State Duma is adopting unlawful discriminatory laws by the dozen. Similar bills to restrict the right to abortion were proposed in 2015, but the Ministry of Health rejected them then and predicted that the ban on abortion would lead to sad consequences: the spread of illegal abortions, the treatment of affected women who will have health problems and the payment of disability benefits. Male officials openly say that the mission of a woman is to increase the birth rate … I am very angry with them, because they have absolutely no right to decide what exactly a woman can do with her body.
Quest for freedom and love. Norwegians and Russians gather in border town Kirkenes for Barents Pride

This is not only a celebration. It is a protest. Against war and repression, explains Valentina Likhoshva, who travelled from Moscow to Norway to take part in the Barents Pride.


Valentina Likhoshva (center) together with Kirkenes town Mayor Lena Bergeng. 


September 27, 2023

The first winter frost is normally coming to Kirkenes in mid September. But the north Norwegian town located on the border to Russia did not feel any freeze this weekend as a significant group of Russians came to town to join the annual queer event.

It is the 7th time that Pride was held in Kirkenes, the town located only few kilometres from the border. It was established in 2017 as a meeting point for talks and celebration between Norwegians and Russians.

Valentina Likhoshva has taken part in the Barents Pride since its start in 2017. 

But this year’s Pride was special and more important than ever before, Valentina Likhoshva underlines. In a time of war, more than 40 Russians had crossed the border to attend.

Valentina has been among the organisers of the event since the start. Over the years, the situation has become more and more difficult, she explains.

“Times are dark for queer people in Russia today. We are declared criminals and sick people, because a few people decided so. A very big part of our society has been deprived the right to live a happy life, even only a life.”

Valentina and her fellow Pride participants don’t fit in Putin’s regime and its ideology of “traditional values” and arch-conservative patriotism. And the war against Ukraine has made the situation even worse.

According to the activist, many of the Russian attendants were concerned that Norwegians would actually not welcome them anymore.

“When you live in Russia you have this image that people from other countries will never forgive you for this war, the victims and all that is happening now. On the one hand, you are enemy of your own government and there is no chance for you to have a normal life. On the other hand, the people that have come here are not only afraid of police in Russia, that the FSB will come, but they were also afraid of how people in Norway will react.”


Video by Liza Vereykina

This year’s Barents Pride included not only a parade down the streets of Kirkenes, but also concerts, debates and workshops. And a church service.

“There was a female priest there, rainbow flags, and everything looked like in a fairytale. When I looked at the people in church yesterday; you would not imagine the experience.”

“The same with the town mayor in the parade. She talked with people. Without any security, and she supported us. I think that when I will tell other people about Barents Pride, many will not believe that this could be now, in this time.”

Pride parade in front of the Russian General Consulate building in Kirkenes. 

For the Russian participants, the Pride offers a lifeline to the world.

“It is so important to feel that you are human again. And that has been possible here in Kirkenes,” Likhoshva underlines.

But not everyone was able to attend, and that was not only because of the increasingly strict visa and cross-border regulations.

“Some of the people that were invited did not come, not because of visas or police, but simply because they do not have energy to go. They told me that if they will see now normal life they will be destroyed. It is too painful for them.”

Pride participants put on masks as they staged a gathering by the Storskog border crossing point. 

According to the organisers, the Russian participants in Barents Pride this year came not only from the Russian North, but from major parts of the country.

“The Barents Pride is unique for all of Russia. Today, there are no other places where you can speak, be visible and where you can meet with other activists,” Likhoshva argues

The Barents Pride is organized by FRI, the Norwegian Helsinki Committee, Queer World, Amnesty and “Equals” from Russia.

All of the attending Russian participants returned back to Russia after the event. Among them also Valentina Likhoshva

She admits that she is afraid

“Like many of us, I am afraid. But what can we do? We do not have any other chance. I cannot be silent, I cannot live like that.”


She constantly fears reactions from the police.

“Every morning I am waiting,” Valentina says.

But at the same time there is also hope.



“I see also something positive in Russia today, and I am sure there is hope. I see a lot of brave and clever people around me. I see good people who continue to help each other and support each other even though the risks are high for them. If we have one tyrant, that does not mean that all people are like him. That is why I continue to stay in Russia. I am not going anywhere,” says Likhoshva.

“These times will pass. Now we must help each other. We will count our victims, we will take care of each other. And tomorrow and forever we will remember everybody that did not turn their back on us, the ones that stood together with us.”

Quest for freedom and love. Norwegians and Russians gather in border town Kirkenes for Barents Pride.




































Photos: Atle Staalesen
ARCTIC

“State for the people, not cogs for the empire.” A Murmansk politician ran for office under anti-war slogans

Maxim Kirilenko, a Communist Party candidate to the municipal council of Kildinstroy, Murmansk region, spoke out against war, imperialism and censorship in his election campaign. 

The Barents Observer spoke with the politician who is not afraid to speak his mind, despite repression and pressure from the authorities.


Maxim Kirilenko’s election flyer. Photo: Maxim Kirilenko

By Olesia Krivtsova
By Georgy Chentemirov
September 28, 2023

“For peace and freedom!”; “We need peace, not mobilization”; “Against war!”; “We need a State for the people, not cogs for the Empire.” These were the slogans local resident Maxim Kirilenko used in his campaign for the Council of Deputies in the village of Kildinstroy in the Murmansk region. He has a small moving business and he ran from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (KPRF), of which, however, he is not a member.

Maxim Kirilenko’s election flyer. Photo: Maxim Kirilenko

“I do not hide my left-wing convictions. I believe that now the greatest demand in Russian society is for social justice. Of course, only leftist parties can bring social justice. I am not a member of the KPRF, but they supported and nominated me” – Maxim Kirilenko said in an interview with The Barents Observer.

However, after the politician built his campaign on anti-war slogans, the Communist Party “disowned” Kirilenko.

“We have repeatedly stated that the communists of the Murmansk region support the special military operation (SVO) in Ukraine, provide support to the soldiers participating in the SVO and to residents of new regions of Russia… We are confident that Victory over Nazism and Banderaism will be won during the SVO!” the first secretary of the KPRF regional committee, Artur Popov, said on his VKontakte page.
Maxim Kirilenko campaigned for only a few days – he was registered as a candidate shortly before the so-called “days of silence.”

“I only had five days to talk to people and distribute some of my leaflets. It is those, whom I managed to visit personally and communicate with personally over the course of five days, voted. Had there been more time, the result would have been better,” Kirilenko said.

Once Maxim began distributing election leaflets with anti-war slogans, he got the interest of the police. He was called to the station during the election campaign.

“Of course, I was then called to the police, but in principle, being a politician, a politician must be able to maneuver and get out of difficult situations. I explained to the police that I put forward the slogan against war because the threat of war between Russia and NATO countries was growing. Well, they let me go for now, and then we’ll see. I explained that we don’t have a war between Russia and Ukraine, we have the SVO (special military operation), and my campaign leaflets say nothing about the SVO.”

Eventually the politician ended up in sixth place with 131 votes. In his opinion, the result is not bad, since the turnout at polling stations was quite small. The council seat went to a candidate from the ruling United Russia party.

“Three quarters of people are not interested in politics at all and do not come to the polls,” Kirilenko said. “The turnout is about twenty percent. And those who come are mainly pensioners and state employees from schools and kindergartens. And then there was early voting.”

Maxim Kirilenko with Gennady Zyuganov (right) and Valery Yarantsev (left). The caption under this photo on the politician’s Vkontakte page reads: “Thank you Gennady Andreevich for your support!!! Our cause is just – Victory will be ours!”

Kirilenko says he has been involved in politics since 2005. He repeatedly ran for various offices, participated in protest events and rallies, and was a member of Garry Kasparov’s United Civil Front and the Solidarity movement, created by Russian opposition.

It has been clear to me since the beginning of the 2000s that our country, under the leadership of Putin, is moving, to put it mildly, in the wrong direction. To put it more harshly, we’re just headed for disaster, that’s all.

“Of course, what happened did not happen overnight, it happened before our eyes, the dictatorship intensified, the regime tightened the screws. People are really afraid to express their opinion, they are even afraid to go out on the street with some kind of anti-war picket, even with a blank sheet of paper, because they will immediately be nabbed and can be closed behind bars for several days. Of course, I saw all this and was aware that there were certain risks.

But what do you do when everyone is afraid. Someone has to express their point of view.

In fact, there are no people who are not afraid, I’m also afraid, I’m concerned, let’s put it this way. I am driven by some kind of inner conviction: you need to act according to your conscience, as you think, that’s what you need to do. If everyone is afraid, then there will be much more evil in the world. Unfortunately, our people are zombied by propaganda. It is difficult to get through to people, of course. The anti-war sentiment in society is not completely absent, but is very weak. So, of course, it was quite risky. Well, I’m still free and that’s good”.