Alexandr Litvinyuk and Alexandr Dubovenko near the court building
In Armyansk Two Believers Were Sentenced to Six Years in Prison. The Court Considered Reading and Discussing the Bible Extremism
CrimeaOn December 1, 2022, Tatyana Fedeneva, judge of the Armyansk City Court of the Republic of Crimea, found Aleksandr Litvinyuk and Aleksandr Dubovenko guilty of extremism and sentenced them to 6 years in a penal colony— exactly what the prosecutor requested for them. The believers were taken into custody in the courtroom.
Aleksandr Litvinyuk, 62, is a pensioner, he worked for many years at state enterprises and factories and raised three children. Aleksandr Dubovenko, 49, worked for a long time as a welder, then as an electrician. In August 2021, searches were carried out in their homes. The men were detained and kept under house arrest for more than a year.
The investigation was conducted by Vitaly Vlasov, an FSB investigator, for 7 months, after which the case was submitted to the Armyansk City Court of the Republic of Crimea. The court hearings lasted six months. At one of the hearings, a witness, a seriously ill elderly woman, refuted the testimony recorded on her behalf by the investigator, and also said that she did not know the defendant Dubovenko and did not attend meetings for worship with him.
Giving his final statement in court, Aleksandr Dubovenko emphasized: "All our activity, mistakenly interpreted as criminal, was in fact nothing more than us exercising our constitutional right to freedom of conscience and religion." Aleksandr Litvinyuk noted in his final statement: “We would never be Jehovah's Witnesses if we incited hatred and religious intolerance or undermined the constitutional order, as is recorded in our criminal case. The same criminal case states that there were no victims.”
The verdict has not entered into force and can be appealed. Believers insist on their complete innocence. In addition to Dubovenko and Litvinyuk, 17 other Crimeans are being prosecuted for their peaceful religious beliefs. Four believers from Crimea are serving sentences for their faith in colonies, and in early October, a court in Sevastopol sent three more to jail.
In a ruling dated July 7, 2022, the European Court of Human Rights criticized the actions of the Russian authorities against believers and stated that “criminal prosecution and criminal liability for the peaceful practice of the religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses, together with others, was based on an unacceptably broad formulation and arbitrary application anti-extremism legislation” (§272).