Artpodgotovka
Artpodgotovka (Russian: Межрегиональное общественное движение «Артподготовка»; Mezhregionalnoye obshchestvennoye dvizheniye «Artpodgotovka»), Russian for "Artillery - or art - preparation" and known in English as the Interregional Social Movement 'Artpodgotovka') is a Russian political organization of a left-wing nationalist character.[2] Recognized as extremist, it was banned on the territory of the Russian Federation.[3] IdeologyIn different periods of its existence, the organization had a completely polar ideology based on the principles of direct democracy with a clearly expressed anti-communism. At the time of its foundation, it was far-right after becoming partially liberal. As Artpodgotovka is a horizontal, decentralized political association, its ideology was different in different regions. The main thesis of the Artpodgotovka ideology was the belief in the inevitability of the revolution on November 5, 2017. Legal statusThe MOD (Interregional Public Movement) "Artpodgotovka" was not officially registered. Having a horizontal structure, it had a different, sometimes only similar ideology in different regions, in some regions there was their own symbolics.[4] However, despite this, on October 26, 2017, the Krasnoyarsk Regional Court recognized the MOD "Artpodgotovka" as extremist and banned its activities on the territory of the Russian Federation. HistoryFoundation (2013)Initially, the name "Artpodgotovka" was used by Maltsev as the name of an art group in Saratov (since 2004). In 2011, together with Babajanyan, Maltsev chose this name as the name of a political Twitter blog, where Maltsev's audience was just under 25,000 people. At the end of 2011, Vyacheslav Maltsev made a decision to create a YouTube channel "ARTPODGOTOVKA", on which on weekdays at 21.00 Moscow time the political program "Bad News" was aired in a live format. Soon, his internet audience grew into a whole movement. An unregistered organization, the MOD "Artpodgotovka", began to form. The organization did not have unified attributes, each region used its own symbols, although all the symbols of "Artpodgotovka" were united by the presence of the red "V" symbol.[5] Blog «ARTPODGOTOVKA»In 2011, the Twitter blog was reborn into a YouTube blog, which was published daily on weekdays. The average transmission length is one and a half to two hours. When the blog was banned in October 2017, the number of its subscribers reached more than 130,000 people. The streams were getting 100,000-400,000 views. There were completely opposite opinions about Maltsev's blog, for example, the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny wrote the following about Artpodgotovka:
In the period from 2013 to 2016, Maltsev "existed" only within the framework of the virtual Internet field. In April 2016, Maltsev announced his candidacy for the primaries of the democratic party PARNAS, where he took 1st place, with a margin of several thousand votes.[7] This caused great contradictions in the leadership of the PARNAS party. So, a member of the political council of the party, Ilya Yashin, said the following at the party congress:
In the summer of 2016, a team began to form around Maltsev, volunteers appeared in the regions.[8][9] The audience of Maltsev's YouTube channel increased sharply after he stated the following on television:
Immediately after the resonant statements of the leader of "Artpodgotovka" on Russian television, both representatives of the opposition movements and ardent guardians began to criticize him. For example, the leader of the biker club "Night Wolves" Alexander "Ths Surgeon" Zaldostanov said the following about the candidate for the State Duma:
Shortly before the elections on September 18, a revealing film about Maltsev and "Artpodgotovka" was released on the federal channel REN TV Opposition walks and MOD «Artpodgotovka»Opposition walksFor the first time, Vyacheslav Maltsev spoke about the opposition's walks in his program "Bad News". This idea was supported by Dmitry Demushkin, Mark Galperin and Ivan Beletsky. After the failure of the PARNAS in the elections to the State Duma, on September 19, Mark Galperin and Ivan Beletsky founded the New Opposition movement, which was later joined by Vyacheslav Maltsev. As a result, on October 8, 2016, the first opposition walk took place in Moscow. In his blog, Maltsev urged people to organize similar actions in their regions. At the end of October, the walk took place in St. Petersburg, after which the walks began in Yekaterinburg and Novosibirsk. In December 2016, walks began in Krasnoyarsk, Irkutsk. The average number of participants in the actions in the regions is about 30 people. However, in some cases, activity could be observed in 50, or even 100 people.[12] As of April 1, 2017, all walks take place in more than 110 cities of the Russian Federation Around the same time, according to a source close to the leadership of the movement, provocateurs were introduced into Artpodgotovka, as well as snitches from the ranks of the activists. MOD "Artpodgotovka"The activists of the movement attended various opposition actions, issued a number of brochures, leaflets and posters. Their own pickets were organized in the capital and regions. The movement (especially in the regions, at the "grassroots" level) tried to cooperate with various opposition organizations of different directions (from left movements to ultra-right organizations). Opinions about ArtpodgotovkaPavel Chikov, a lawyer and head of the international human rights group Agora, characterizes this movement as follows:
The paramilitary wing and communication with the "Network" groupIn February 2018, the Federal Security Service announced the prevention of a number of high-profile terrorist attacks throughout Russia, as well as the detention of members of the "Network" group. According to law enforcement officers, the group consisted of two conspiratorial cells - "Voskhod" and "5/11". However, as it turned out later, the "Network" cell "5/11" got its name not because of its connection with the "Artpodgotovka" MOD and the so-called "Revolution 5/11/17", but because its members wore clothes of the brand of the same name. As it turned out later, those involved in this case are not supporters of "Artpodgotovka". The detainees turned out to be anarchists and anti-fascists.[14][15] Journalists of the REN TV channel wrote in the fall of 2016 that Artpodgotovka was preparing an armed uprising. It was reported that the activists sew chevrons, similar to the chevrons of the Ukrainian extremist organization "Right Sector". A video of the negotiations between Maltsev, Gorsky and Demushkin was also published.[16] Political action "5/11/17"The leader of the movement, Vyacheslav Maltsev, from the very beginning assured his supporters that a revolution would take place in Russia in the fall of 2017. In 2014, he set an exact date - November 5, 2017. From the very morning on November 5, 2017, the central streets of the capital were filled with paddy wagons accompanied by riot police officers. In Moscow, more than 1,000 people took part in the so-called "revolution 5/11/17", of whom over 260 were detained. A quarter of those detained are underage. According to media reports, many of the detainees were casual passers-by, or politicized citizens who wanted to "see the movement."[citation needed] The leader of the MOD "Artpodgotovka", in an interview with Meduza's correspondent, commented on the incident as follows:
The actions were also held in St. Petersburg, Saratov, Krasnodar, Krasnoyarsk, Perm, Rostov-on-Don. They accounted for about 200 arrests.[18][19][20] Organization ban (2017)On October 26, 2017, the Krasnoyarsk Regional Court declared the MOD Artpodgotovka extremist. Since November, mass detentions of Maltsev's supporters began throughout the country; in total, more than 30 criminal cases have been opened in Russia against the participants in the movement. Activists of the Vyacheslav Maltsev movement were also persecuted: In the Krasnoyarsk Territory, they detained Maltsev's supporters Roman Maryan and Pyotr Isaev, who were on the train to Moscow to take part in the protest on November 5, but were detained by police and the FSB. On November 2, a search was carried out in the apartment of Sergei Ryzhov, a Saratov supporter, and 200 grams of TNT and 5 Molotov cocktails were found. The detainee claims that explosive substances were planted on him during a search of the apartment. A criminal case has been initiated against him under Article 205 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation "Terrorism". On November 3, 2017, at the request of the General Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation dated October 31, 2017, numerous communities of Vyacheslav's supporters and participants in Artpodgotovka were blocked on the VKontakte social network.[21] Also on November 3, in Moscow, the FSB, together with Centre E detained the participants of the "Artpodgotovka", cold weapons and Molotov cocktails were seized. The detainees allegedly intended to set fire to administrative buildings and attack the police on November 4 and 5. Criminal cases were initiated under Article 205 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation "Terrorism".[22][23] Vyacheslav Maltsev called the detention of his supporters a "dirty provocation":
The participants in the movement were detained as especially dangerous. The operatives were supported by special forces groups of the FSB and OMON. In Moscow, to get into the apartment of the Revolutionaries, a window was blown up. In Saint Petersburg, Krasnoyarsk, Saratov, several groups of FSB special forces were used.[24] According to the official position of law enforcement agencies, the "Artpodgotovka" movement was preparing an armed uprising and a violent seizure of power.[25] Opinions about the objectivity of the ban on "Artpodgotovka" and the arrest of its supportersKirill Bragin, head of the Novosibirsk branch of the Russian People's Council, considers the following about the Artpodgotovka MOD:
Political scientist Ivan Preobrazhensky said about the arrests of members of the movement:
Oppositionist Alexei Navalny said in his video blog about the arrests of Maltsev's supporters:
Artpodgotovka in cultureDocumentaries
Slogans
References
|