Members of the punk group Pussy Riot were attacked on Wednesday in a public plaza in Sochi while preparing to make a video of a new protest song called "Putin will teach you how to love your Motherland."
Just after beginning the performance, a group of Russian Cossacks branding whips and pepper spray began attacking the group members, the WaPo reports:
Alyokhina tweeted a photo Wednesday of a
young man who had joined the five women for the performance — usually
they perform as a feminist collective. He had a bloodied face, an injury
Alyokhina said was suffered in the attack. She posted another photo of a
woman with red marks on her chest.
Tolokonnikova, who was knocked to the ground and hit with a whip, tweeted that her husband, Pyotr Verzilov, had been taken to the hospital, unable to see because of the pepper spray. And David Khakim, a Sochi environmental activist, tweeted that police detained one man for questioning but let the others go.
“We were attacked by 10 Cossacks and men in civilian clothes,” he tweeted.
The Cossacks, descended from czarist-era horsemen who patrolled the borders of the Russian empire, are remembered historically for leading pogroms against Jews. Today they are socially conservative and ardent supporters of the Russian Orthodox Church. Recently, they have been revived as a sort of volunteer citizen patrol, and about 800 of them have supplemented the police providing security for the Winter Games here.
Tolokonnikova, who was knocked to the ground and hit with a whip, tweeted that her husband, Pyotr Verzilov, had been taken to the hospital, unable to see because of the pepper spray. And David Khakim, a Sochi environmental activist, tweeted that police detained one man for questioning but let the others go.
“We were attacked by 10 Cossacks and men in civilian clothes,” he tweeted.
The Cossacks, descended from czarist-era horsemen who patrolled the borders of the Russian empire, are remembered historically for leading pogroms against Jews. Today they are socially conservative and ardent supporters of the Russian Orthodox Church. Recently, they have been revived as a sort of volunteer citizen patrol, and about 800 of them have supplemented the police providing security for the Winter Games here.
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