Timur Kacharava

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Timur Kacharava (Russian: Тимур Владимирович Качарава, Timur Vladimirovich Kacharava; Georgian: თემურ კაჭარავა, T’emur Kach’arava) (August 21, 1985November 13, 2005) was a Russian rock musician and anti-fascist activist of Georgian origin. He was murdered at the age of 20 by members of a far right nationalist group in St. Petersburg.[1]

[edit] Biography

Kacharava was born into the family of an army officer near Chernobyl. He studied at Saint Petersburg State University and was involved in a student anti-fascist and anarchist group that organized anti-fascist demonstrations and philanthropic actions. In 2003, he founded the anarcho-punk band Sandinista!, for which he played guitar. In 2005, he also played for the band Distress, which toured Sweden.

On November 13, 2005, Kacharava was stabbed to death in St. Petersburg’s Vosstaniya Square, receiving five wounds in the neck.[2] A companion was also stabbed and seriously wounded. Observers believed that the attack may have been motivated by his activism in the anti-fascist movement.[3]

[edit] Aftermath of his murder

Over 3,000 St. Petersburg State University students petitioned the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, to find and punish the murderers. In December 2005, police arrested seven suspects who eventually admitted to the crime. On August 7, 2007, Alexander Shabalin was sentenced to 12 years in prison on charges of a murder and incitement to ethnic or racial hatred. Six other members of the gang, who held Kacharava and prevented him from resisting, were charged with inciting social hatred, and were given suspended sentences.[4]

Although a Russian human rights group hailed the trial as the most important victory of the Russian court in 2007, some human rights activists, as well as Kacharava’s family and friends, felt disappointed.[5] They asserted that he had been followed, received threats by telephone, and been targeted before. They claimed that Kacharava was the victim of an organized and well-armed neo-Nazi group. However, the court accepted the scenario in which the murderer claimed he had spontaneously suggested beating up an anti-fascist activist, and did not charge the other assaulters as accomplices in the murder.[6] Kacharava’s death led some of Russia’s young anti-fascists to change tactics and use violence against neo-Nazis and racists.[4]

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