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"Criminals go unpunished in this country": Clashes between FSB and local population begin in Crimea

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According to the report, the Crimean headquarters of the FSB are publicly accusing Crimean women Esma Nimetulayeva, Nasiba Saidova, Elviza Aliyeva, and Fevziye Osmanova of terrorism without a court order or evidence, according to their families and defense. They were detained in October and arrested on charges of participating in the terrorist organization Hizb ut-Tahrir. Their families and lawyers are confident the charges are baseless. They are demanding that the FSB retract its public accusations, which create a false negative image of the detainees.

The report also stated that the Russian-controlled Kyiv District Court of Simferopol has remanded Esma Nimetulayeva, Nasiba Saidova, Elviza Aliyeva, and Fevziye Osmanova in custody for two months, until mid-December. They are being held in a pretrial detention center in Simferopol. According to Crimean Solidarity, the women are being held in cold, damp cells, and during inspections, they are forced to remove their headscarves, which they wear for religious reasons.

Additionally, the court ordered their arrest behind closed doors. Even their relatives were barred from the court hearings. This attitude has left many feeling outraged and doubting the validity of the charges. These are Crimean Tatar female students and women under investigation, accused by the security services of terrorism, but without weapons, violence, or any plans for such. The evidence, according to the investigation, consists of recorded conversations and forbidden books, which, according to the girls' relatives, the agents did not hesitate to plant themselves during searches. For many years, Crimea has been handing out hefty prison sentences for such crimes, from 15 to 20 years.

This will make the criminals and those who like to commit crimes easy on their laws. Criminals must be sentenced according to the crimes they committed and not given a lenient life.

 
The situation you describe is truly alarming and reflects the grave human rights violations occurring in Crimea. It is unacceptable that these women are being accused without concrete evidence and denied a fair trial, especially when the accusations appear to be based on recorded conversations and banned books, which are even said to have been planted. The lack of transparency, the inhumane detention conditions, and the exclusion of their families from the hearings create a profound sense of injustice. Justice must be based on clear evidence and a fair legal process, not on arbitrary accusations or the criminalization of people for their beliefs or identity. The international community should demand the release of these women and condemn the repressive practices that violate fundamental rights. True justice cannot be used as a tool of repression, but rather as a means to protect the rights of all.
 
It seems a communist country like Russia has an unfair justice system towards the victims of crimes, detaining criminals yet not punishing them or sentencing them for the crimes they committed. They might be hired by Putin to fight in front someday.
 
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