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RUSSIARSS

Hunger strikes go mainstream?

by Marc Bennetts at 27/02/2012 21:08

When Olga Lomakova and dozens of other residents of the west Siberian city of Omsk began to refuse food last month to draw attention to alleged police and court corruption they joined a growing number of Russians using hunger as an means of protest.

“Our hunger strike is an act of desperation and hopelessness,” Lomakova, 36, told RIA Novosti in a telephone interview on Friday.

All but 15 of the more than 50 people who began the strike in late January over issues ranging from the alleged framing of relatives by police to property fraud have now dropped out. One of the group, 64-year-old Alexei Nedelko, died of heart failure after three days without food.

Lomakova alleges she was unfairly found guilty of a car accident in which one person died and two were injured, despite the testimony of nine eyewitnesses and a court admission that it was the other vehicle involved in the crash that ran a red light. She was sentenced to three years behind bars, to be served when her small son reaches the age of 14. The driver of the other car, Lomakova said, has “connections in the police force.”

“This is my second hunger strike,” said pensioner Svetlana Kiseleva, who alleges she was cheated in a property deal by an Omsk company owned by a city lawmaker from Putin’s United Russia party. “The first time, local politicians came to see us, but nothing changed.”

“If I die, then I die,” she added, as quoted by the Russian news website Public Portal.

Opposition Left Front leader Sergei Udaltsov also undertook a hunger strike late last year to protest what he said was persecution by the authorities. And on Friday, political activist Tatyana Stetsura, from the Other Russia party, announced she would refuse all food and water to protest her arrest at a Moscow rally against the “dictatorship” of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

In Moscow, dozens of army officers declared on Friday the start of a hunger strike in a bid to force military authorities to provide them with apartments. Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev have promised on a number of occasions to solve the critical problem of housing for servicemen, many of whom are forced to live with their families in one room accommodation without separate kitchens or bathrooms.

In the North Caucasus, a group of Stavropol region opposition activists are refusing food after being kept off the ballot for local elections. And in the Urals city of Magnitogorsk, over 33 people have been on hunger strike since February 6 to protest the authorities’ lack of action in a case of alleged property fraud. Two of the group, including a ten-year-old girl, had earlier tied to kill themselves, local media said.

Former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky has also used the tactic of a hunger strike to draw attention to his case. And even football fans upset over the death of the FC Moskva side also refused food for a number of days in late 2010.

While hunger strikes are a relatively new phenomenon, fasting for either religious or health purposes has deep roots here. Throughout the centuries, Russian Orthodox monks and mystics have embarked on fasts as part of their spiritual quests. And even modern Russia, notorious for its excesses, has seen its high-profile proponents of fasting.

But, in Omsk, for Olga Lomakova and her fellow protesters, hunger is a much more serious matter. However, despite three weeks without food, they know their fates still lie in the hands of the authorities.

“Our physical and emotional resources have a limit,” she said. “There’s nothing else we can do.” 

The views expressed here are the author’s own.

Read other articles of the print issue "The Moscow News #14"
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