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DBpedia 2016-04

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Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "The Bolotnaya Square case is a criminal case by the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation on the counts of alleged massive riot (article 212 of the Russian Criminal code) and alleged violence against police (article 318 of the Russian Criminal code) during the \"March of the Millions\" on May 6, 2012 on the Bolotnaya square in Moscow. The demonstration was one of the biggest protests in Russia since the 1990s.The Bolotnaya Square case is largely recognized as politically motivated both internationally as well as in Russia. Thus Russian Human Rights Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin repeatedly stated that \"there were no riots on Bolotnaya Square\" and that \"innocent people were subjected to criminal sanctions\". The European Court of Human Rights also issued numerous verdicts where the court ruled that in the Bolotnaya Square case Russia violated European Convention on Human Rights. The European Parliament issued resolutions 2013/2667(RSP) of June 13, 2013 and resolution 2014/2628(RSP) of March 13, 2014 on the political nature of the bolotnaya square case. Prisoners of the case were recognized as prisoners of conscience by the Amnesty International.Overall, more than 30 people were accused, four of them women. Most of them were kept under arrest, several under house arrest, and one escaped abroad. Fearing persecution, several other people left Russia and were granted asylum in Spain, Sweden, Lithuania, Estonia and Germany.Houses of the opposition leaders Alexey Navalny, Sergey Udaltsov, Kseniya Sobchak, Boris Nemtsov, Ilya Yashin and Pyotr Verzilov were searched.More than 200 investigators are working on the case. According to Novaya Gazeta, most of them call the case “political” in private discussions. More than 13 thousand people have been questioned as witnesses, the overwhelming majority of them being law enforcement agents.In order to help the arrested the supporters created an organization called the May 6th Committee. Most of the people accused in the Bolotnaya square case then were amnestied in December 2013, due to the public pressure both in home and abroad in support of the political prisoners."@en }

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