From left to right: Valentina Ermilova, Maria Myasnikova, Ekaterina Olshevskaya and Kristina Golik on the day of the appeal
From left to right: Valentina Ermilova, Maria Myasnikova, Ekaterina Olshevskaya and Kristina Golik on the day of the appeal
In Blagoveshchensk, Sentence of Four Women — Jehovah's Witnesses Came into Force. Appeal Did not Satisfy Their Complaints
Amur RegionOn March 10, 2025, the Amur Regional Court upheld the sentence against Yekaterina Olshevskaya, Mariya Myasnikova, Kristina Golik and Valentina Yermilova: forced labor for up to 2 years and 6 months.
The court of first instance issued the verdict in December 2024. The believers pleaded not guilty, appealed and asked to be acquitted. In their complaints, they drew attention to the groundlessness of the accusation and the absence of any socially dangerous consequences of their actions. The same was confirmed by witnesses questioned in the court of first instance. They said that believers gathered for communication, read the Bible, but there were never any calls to undermine the state system, hatred or violence. The prosecutor insisted on the legality of the sentence and asked to leave it unchanged.
Dawid Bunikowski, visiting scholar at University of Eastern Finland's School of Theology, academic associate at Cardiff School of Law and Politics' Centre for Law and Religion, said: "This is ridiculous that people are punished for worshipping in private."