Anatoliy Isakov with his friends in front of the court building

Anatoliy Isakov with his friends in front of the court building

Anatoliy Isakov with his friends in front of the court building

Unjust Verdicts

Court of Appeal Upholds Sentence for Against Anatoliy Isakov, Cancer Patient, for His Faith. He Will Pay a Fine of 400,000 Rubles

Kurgan Region

On November 14, 2024, the Kurgan Regional Court decided not to toughen the sentence against Anatoliy Isakov, 60, as Dmitriy Kulikov, Deputy Prosecutor of Kurgan, had sought. In his appeal he requested 8 years in a penal colony for the believer with a disability.

Anatoliy's peaceful meetings with friends, where Bible topics were discussed, were portrayed by the prosecution as organizing the activity of an extremist organization. Among the evidence presented against the believer were testimonies from witnesses who either did not know Anatoliy or had retracted their previous statements. A secret witness admitted during interrogation that Isakov's actions did not violate anyone's rights.

From the very beginning of the criminal prosecution, Isakov faced threats to his health — he was placed in custody despite serious illnesses that precluded such a measure. Only after the intervention of human rights organizations was Anatoliy released from the pretrial detention center.

"The Supreme Court of the Russian Federation did not ban the religion of Jehovah's Witnesses," the believer emphasized in his final statement. "I still have the right to freely practice the religion I have chosen, including reading the Bible and discussing it with others, praying to God, singing songs praising God, and talking to others about my faith. [...] What is happening to me is political repression. Actually, I was found guilty for practicing the religion of Jehovah's Witnesses. By their actions, the state authorities have portrayed me in an unfavorable light before society, contributing to the spread of prejudice."

Many believers with disabilities face similar treatment from law enforcement officers. Among them are Andrey Vlasov, Vladimir Fomin, Adam Svarichevskiy, Vladimir Skachidub, Denis Peresunko, and Aleksandr Lubin. The latter died a month after his guilty verdict was handed down.

The Case of Isakov and Minsafin in Kurgan

Case History
In July 2021, the investigation charged Anatoliy Isakov, a disabled person, with organizing the activity of an extremist organization, and Valeriy Minsafin of participating in it. The next day, the homes of the believers were searched, and the men were placed in a temporary detention facility. The investigator released Minsafin from custody, and the court sent Isakov, who can hardly move, is fighting cancer and needs to regularly take strong prescription medication, to a pretrial detention center for 1.5 months, interrupting his vital chemotherapy. After a request from the ECHR and human rights activists to the Russian authorities, the court released Isakov under a ban on certain actions. Minsafin was cleared of charges in March 2023. In June 2023, the case of Anatoliy Isakov went to court. It is based, among other things, on the testimony of a secret witness who testified that the believers discuss the Bible at their meetings. In July 2024, the prosecutor requested a 6.5-year suspended sentence for the believer. In August 2024, the court imposed a fine of 400,000 rubles on him. The court of appeal later upheld the decision.
Timeline

Persons in case

Criminal case

Region:
Kurgan Region
Locality:
Kurgan
Suspected of:
According to the investigation, "he conducted out... religious meetings... including through videoconferencing using the Zoom platform."
Court case number:
12102370012000107
Initiated:
July 13, 2021
Current case stage:
the verdict entered into force
Investigating:
First Department for Investigating Especially Important Cases of the Investigative Directorate of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation for the Kurgan Region
Articles of Criminal Code of Russian Federation:
282.2 (1)
Court case number:
1-44/2024 (1-1069/2023)
Judge of the Court of First Instance:
Sergey Lytkin
Court of First Instance:
Kurgan City Court of the Kurgan Region
Case History
Back to top