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Belarus: Football fans jailed for anti-Putin chant | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
A court in the Belarusian capital Minsk has jailed eight Ukrainian football fans after they sang an insulting song about Russian President Vladimir Putin. | |
One man was sent to prison for 10 days for possessing fascist symbols. Seven others were jailed for five days for using obscene language. | |
They had joined in anti-Putin chants and songs at the Euro 2016 qualifier between Ukraine and Belarus. | |
A number of Belarusian fans were also convicted and fined. | |
Both local and visiting fans at the Euro 2016 qualifier between Ukraine and Belarus in Borisov came together in a rousing rendition of a well-known song - which has became a popular expression of opposition to Putin in Ukraine, the Belarusian paper Nasha Niva reports. | |
Belarusian fans are also heard voicing their solidarity with their Ukrainian counterparts by chanting the signature slogan of the Maidan protests in Kiev - Slava Ukrayini ("Glory to Ukraine"). | |
The Ukrainians return the favour by chanting Zhyve Belarus ("Long live Belarus"). | |
After the match, about 100 Ukrainian and 30 Belarusian were initially held and taken to the local KGB station, according to the opposition website Charter '97. | |
A court later sentenced seven Ukrainians to five days in prison for "foul language", the Ukrayinska Pravda news website reports. | |
Four others were fined, while one Ukrainian fan was given a 10-day sentence for allegedly wearing a swastika on his clothing. | |
It's not the first time the anti-Putin song has made waves. In June, Russian officials called for the resignation of the then Ukrainian Foreign Minister, Andriy Deshchytsya, after he joined Kiev protesters in insulting Putin. | |
The authorities in Moscow are frowning on fruity language more generally - in April, parliament passed a bill that bans swearing from films, music and other works of art. | |
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