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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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102290
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1022001.000
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1992-08-28
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WORLD, Page 47World NotesSOVIET UNIONHatred's Just Reward
As the judge read the verdict in the Moscow courtroom last
week, the defendant erupted. "I'm ready to die for Russia,"
yelled Konstantin Smirnov-Ostashvili, 54, leader of a faction
of Pamyat, the ultra-right, Russian nationalist movement. "It's
all a lie!" Unfazed, the judge sentenced Smirnov-Ostashvili to
two years of hard labor for shouting anti-Semitic threats at
a meeting of liberal writers last January.
It was remarkable that he had come to trial at all. Though
a videotape made at the January session clearly showed the
Pamyat leader shouting his diatribe against Jews through a
megaphone, it was not until July -- and after pressure from
liberal intellectuals -- that Smirnov-Ostashvili was charged
with "inciting ethnic hatred" under a little-used article in
the Russian Federation criminal code.
The verdict came as welcome news for Jews both in the Soviet
Union and abroad. As Jerry Strober of the U.S. National
Conference on Soviet Jewry put it, the decision was "a further
sign of the Soviet Union's increasing recognition of its
human-rights obligations."