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Vladimir Bukovsky: Soviet-era dissident dies in Cambridge | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
A leading Soviet-era dissident and Russian human rights campaigner, Vladimir Bukovsky, has died at a Cambridge hospital at the age of 76. | A leading Soviet-era dissident and Russian human rights campaigner, Vladimir Bukovsky, has died at a Cambridge hospital at the age of 76. |
Bukovsky had a heart attack on Sunday evening after ailing for several years. | Bukovsky had a heart attack on Sunday evening after ailing for several years. |
He became a prominent Soviet dissident in the early 1960s and was soon after declared mentally ill. | He became a prominent Soviet dissident in the early 1960s and was soon after declared mentally ill. |
That avoided the inconvenience of a trial, and Bukovsky would spend the next 12 years, on and off, in psychiatric clinics and prison camps. | That avoided the inconvenience of a trial, and Bukovsky would spend the next 12 years, on and off, in psychiatric clinics and prison camps. |
In 1971, between prison sentences, Bukovsky helped smuggle to the West the psychiatric hospital records of six well-known dissidents - exposing a Soviet practice of declaring dissidents mentally ill in order to detain and discredit them, rather than have them labelled as political prisoners. | In 1971, between prison sentences, Bukovsky helped smuggle to the West the psychiatric hospital records of six well-known dissidents - exposing a Soviet practice of declaring dissidents mentally ill in order to detain and discredit them, rather than have them labelled as political prisoners. |
Then in 1976 Bukovsky was expelled to the West, in exchange for the imprisoned Chilean Communist Party leader Luis Corvalán. He settled in Cambridge in the UK. | Then in 1976 Bukovsky was expelled to the West, in exchange for the imprisoned Chilean Communist Party leader Luis Corvalán. He settled in Cambridge in the UK. |
Living in the UK, Bukovsky continued writing and campaigning against the Soviet government and was a fierce critic of current Russian President Vladimir Putin. He wrote a best-selling memoir, To Build a Castle, and later analysed thousands of pages of top-secret Soviet archives that he had stolen in 1992, according to his official website. | Living in the UK, Bukovsky continued writing and campaigning against the Soviet government and was a fierce critic of current Russian President Vladimir Putin. He wrote a best-selling memoir, To Build a Castle, and later analysed thousands of pages of top-secret Soviet archives that he had stolen in 1992, according to his official website. |
In 2015, he was charged in the UK with creating and possessing indecent images of children. He denied the charges and was later ruled too ill to stand trial. | In 2015, he was charged in the UK with creating and possessing indecent images of children. He denied the charges and was later ruled too ill to stand trial. |
Read more on related topics: | Read more on related topics: |
In December 2006 Bukovsky told the BBC it was "clear" that the Russian authorities were behind the poisoning of Putin critic Alexander Litvinenko, who had ingested radioactive polonium-210 in London the previous month. | In December 2006 Bukovsky told the BBC it was "clear" that the Russian authorities were behind the poisoning of Putin critic Alexander Litvinenko, who had ingested radioactive polonium-210 in London the previous month. |
A British public inquiry concluded in 2016 that President Putin - a KGB officer in Soviet times - had probably approved the assassination. | A British public inquiry concluded in 2016 that President Putin - a KGB officer in Soviet times - had probably approved the assassination. |
The inquiry report said Litvinenko - a Russian ex-secret service officer - developed a "very strong" friendship with Bukovsky, and their long discussions had helped shape Litvinenko's political views. Bukovsky had talked to him at length about Soviet KGB repression in the 20th Century. | The inquiry report said Litvinenko - a Russian ex-secret service officer - developed a "very strong" friendship with Bukovsky, and their long discussions had helped shape Litvinenko's political views. Bukovsky had talked to him at length about Soviet KGB repression in the 20th Century. |
Back in 1974, the celebrated novelist Vladimir Nabokov had praised Bukovsky's courage as a dissident in a letter to The Observer. | Back in 1974, the celebrated novelist Vladimir Nabokov had praised Bukovsky's courage as a dissident in a letter to The Observer. |
"Bukovsky's heroic speech to the court in defence of freedom, and his five years of martyrdom in a despicable psychiatric jail will be remembered long after the torturers he defied have rotted away," Nabokov wrote. | "Bukovsky's heroic speech to the court in defence of freedom, and his five years of martyrdom in a despicable psychiatric jail will be remembered long after the torturers he defied have rotted away," Nabokov wrote. |
The anti-Putin punk band Pussy Riot say they were inspired by Bukovsky as someone "undeterred by fear" of state retaliation. | |
In 1978, after his expulsion to the West, Bukovsky read extracts from his autobiography on the BBC Russian Service. | In 1978, after his expulsion to the West, Bukovsky read extracts from his autobiography on the BBC Russian Service. |
In 2014 he explained what motivated his struggle against Soviet repression: | |
"All of us dissidents said that politics must be moral. And we didn't arise as a political movement. We were a moral movement. Our basic impulse was not to transform Russia, but simply not to be a participant in crime. Not to become part of the regime. That was the most powerful motivation." | "All of us dissidents said that politics must be moral. And we didn't arise as a political movement. We were a moral movement. Our basic impulse was not to transform Russia, but simply not to be a participant in crime. Not to become part of the regime. That was the most powerful motivation." |