Punch Metro
  • Home
  • Banditry
  • Boko Haram
  • City news
  • Crime
  • Insurgency
  • IPOB
  • Police brutality
  • Sports
  • Video
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Banditry
  • Boko Haram
  • City news
  • Crime
  • Insurgency
  • IPOB
  • Police brutality
  • Sports
  • Video
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Punch Metro
Home City news

Russian imprisoned poet, fiancée plan prison wedding

by Agency Report
December 4, 2022
in City news, featured
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Poet
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

You might also like

Delta man slumps, dies inside bank

VIDEO: Angry Oyo protesters storm Makinde’s office

1,531 Nigerians return from Ukraine – FG

In a Moscow prison where he is held for reciting an anti-war poem in public, Artyom Kamardin scribbled some hearts in a letter to his girlfriend Alexandra Popova.

Showing AFP a scan of the letter on her computer, Popova bursts into laughter, pointing at what looks like a potato with legs.

“This is a cat,” her prisoner boyfriend had written next to his drawing.

Popova, 28, giggles looking at it.

She even got the clumsy drawing tattooed on her arm to “keep a bit of Artyom forever” on her body, she said. Unless, she jokes, someone was to “cut her skin off.”

Her boyfriend Kamardin, 32, says police officers raped him when they arrested him for reading out the poem against President Vladimir Putin’s military attack on Ukraine.

Her tattoo and dark humour help Popova shield herself from the horror unleashed on the couple.

Many families have been torn apart and separated by Putin’s decision to send troops to Ukraine on February 24. Thousands are grieving loved ones, others are painfully separated by military mobilisation or forced exile.

As for Kamardin and Popova, it’s the repressive machine that has turned their lives into hell.

– Sexual assault and forced apologies –

On September 26, masked officers barged into the young couple’s flat.

They grabbed the poet and took him to a separate room.

There, as he told his lawyer, he was beaten and raped with a barbell.

Popova, meanwhile, said officers had threatened her with “gang rape”, hit her and sprayed superglue on her cheeks and mouth.

Immediately after the detention, Kamardin was forced to film an apology video – a common punishment in authoritarian regimes, but still rare in Moscow.

Popova says her boyfriend has been receiving threats of sexual assault in prison.

The couple has pressed charges and in November Russia’s Investigative Committee said it was checking possible “abuse of power”, according to a document seen by AFP.

Popova remains traumatised by the ordeal.

“I keep thinking that someone is going to kick the door down when I’m at home, that I am being followed or tapped,” she says.

“I know it’s paranoia, that it’s not real, but I have lost any sense of security.”

On the eve of his arrest, Kamardin went to the statue of poet Vladimir Mayakovsky in central Moscow, where dissidents have been gathering since the Soviet era.

There, he recited his poem entitled “Kill me, militia man!” – an insult to pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.

During his performance, Kamardin also shouted offensive slogans against the imperial “New Russia” project aiming to annex the south of Ukraine.

“His poetry is quite brutal, but he is a very sweet guy,” Popova says.

She has learned the legal article with which Kamardin was charged with by heart, reciting it like a poem: “article 282, part 2, point A.”

It corresponds to “inciting hatred with violence of the threat of its use” and carries a maximum sentence of six years.

– Prison wedding –

The two met at a protest in 2019.

They were initially friends but “love is unescapable,” she smiled.

Back then, she worked for the opposition party Yabloko. He was an engineer with a passion for poetry.

They both lived within the Moscow liberal bubble, where politicised artists, journalists and activists mingled.

“It’s a way of life, not simply a hobby,” Popova said.

But their bubble burst when the Ukraine offensive was launched and repression intensified.

Many fled, and thousands of fines and hundreds of prison sentences were handed out to those who denounced the military operation.

Kamardin and Popova were detained at an anti-war protest in the spring.

He got fined and she spent 25 days in detention.

Both now want to get married in prison.

This would make it easier for Popova to visit Kamardin, who she has not seen since his arrest.

She was hoping to see him on November 24 at a pre-trial detention hearing, where AFP saw her again.

But her hopes were shattered.

Kamardin was transferred to a psychiatric hospital and did not make it to court.

Outside the tribunal, Popova is shaking in the cold.

“I was hoping to see him, to hear him,” she says, sobbing.

It’s late and the young woman lights a cigarette: “I have to go home.”

And she disappears into the night.

Tags: Russian

Recommended For You

Delta man slumps, dies inside bank

Delta man slumps, dies inside bank

February 3, 2023
VIDEO: Angry protesters storm Oyo gov’s office

VIDEO: Angry Oyo protesters storm Makinde’s office

February 3, 2023
1,531 Nigerians return from Ukraine – FG

1,531 Nigerians return from Ukraine – FG

February 3, 2023
Sex tape: Court orders Oxlade to pay N5m damages

Sex tape: Court orders Oxlade to pay N5m damages

February 2, 2023
IPOB halts sit-at-home for elections

IPOB halts sit-at-home for elections

February 2, 2023
Egusi contains more protein than beans - Aproko Doctor

Egusi contains more protein than beans – Aproko Doctor

February 2, 2023
Next Post
Avoid crimes, Anthony Joshua advises youth

Avoid crimes, Anthony Joshua advises youth

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Home
  • Banditry
  • Boko Haram
  • City news
  • Crime
  • Insurgency
  • IPOB
  • Police brutality
  • Sports
  • Video
  • Sports

© 2023 punch metro

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Banditry
  • Big Cities
  • Boko Haram
  • Celeb
  • City news
  • City Rounds
  • Commuting
  • Courts
  • Crime
  • Gunmen
  • Cultism
  • Customs
  • Farmers-herders clashes
  • Fraud
  • Gambling
  • Grassroots
  • Insurgency
  • IPOB
    • Sit-at-Home
  • Landlord and tenants
  • Markets
  • Movies
  • NCDSC
  • News
  • Personal Finance
  • Podcast
  • Police
  • Police brutality
  • Recharge Card
  • Renting
  • Ritual killings/kidnappings
  • Showbiz
  • Sports
  • Trending
  • Video

© 2023 punch metro

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?