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Prisoner swap: Russian dissidents conflicted over release

Louis Oelofse
August 2, 2024

Freed as part of a prisoner swap between Russia and the West, the opposition figures had mixed feelings about the deal. They said they worry it could "encourage" Russian President Vladimir Putin to take more hostages.

https://p.dw.com/p/4j3jv
Russian dissidents Ilya Yashin, Vladimir Kara-Murza and Andrei Pivovarov hold a press conference at DW in Bonn after being freed in a multi-country prisoner swap
Russian dissidents Vladimir Kara-Murza, Andrei Pivovarov, Ilya Yashin (left to right) made their first public appearance since the release a day earlierImage: Florian Görner/DW

Andrei Pivovarov, Vladimir Kara-Murza and Ilya Yashin entered DW's conference room in Bonn, Germany, on Friday and started speaking with little fanfare.

The three Russian opposition figures, who a day earlier were still serving sentences in Russia, were among those freed in the largest prisoner exchange since the Cold War.

They arrived in Germany less than 24 hours before, and the media conference was their first chance to speak about their experiences in Russian prison and their shock at being released.

"This feels really surreal. This feels like a film. I was certain I was going to die in [President Vladimir] Putin's prison," Kara-Murza said. He added that a week ago, he was in Siberia, yesterday was at Lefortovo prison and "we're here now on the wonderful Rhine River." 

Freed Russian dissidents speak with reporters in Bonn

'Understand how hard it is to let a murderer go free'

Yashin said it was hard to accept that he was free "because a murderer was free" — a reference to Vadim Krasikov, a Russian spy convicted of killing a former Chechen militant in Berlin in 2019, who was released as part of the deal.

Yashin said he had a brief exchange with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz at the Cologne/Bonn airport on Thursday over the exchange. "I turned to him and said that I understand how hard it is to let a murderer go free. In exchange for a murderer, two people who had done nothing wrong had to be released."

Kara-Murza said the operation was "about saving lives, not exchanging prisoners."

"Scholz is being criticized in some quarters for the difficult decision to release Putin's personal killer," he added. "But easy decisions come only in dictatorships."

Yashin and Kara-Murza both said they refused to sign confessions or statements seeking a pardon during their detention. 

"I said, I am not going to be asked to be freed, to admit any guilt. I will not go to a person I consider a tyrant, a murderer, an enemy of his own country for a favor," Yashin said. 

"I didn't sign a condition for a pardon, but I was still pardoned. We never gave our consent [to be expelled from Russia], yet here we are," Kara-Muza said, adding he also never signed any document admitting guilt or remorse. 

Hundreds of people still in prison in Russia

Yashin said he was taken out of Russia against his will and wanted to stay in the country but agreed with the swap out of concern that the exchange would be canceled.

Ilya Yashin holds his head during an emotional address to reporters
At on stage Yashin removed his glasses and seemed to be holding back tearsImage: Leon Kuegeler/REUTERS

Yashin had been imprisoned for criticizing Russia's war in Ukraine and was serving an eight-and-a-half-year sentence in Moscow.

Looking distressed at times while speaking, Yashin vowed to "continue political activity; we understand our responsibility."

"I don't know how to do Russian politics outside of Russia, but I will try to learn," he said.

Kara-Murza: Many in Russia do not support war in Ukraine

"There are many people in Russia who are against the war, who don't believe Kremlin propaganda," Kara-Murza said.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning writer had been detained since 2022 and was serving a 25-year prison sentence on charges of treason related to his criticism of Putin and the war in Ukraine.

Pivovarov echoed this point and called for more efforts to help Russians, saying, "It is wrong to associate Russian people with the government's policies."

Freed Russian opposition activist Andrei Pivovarov speaks to DW
Pivovarov called on the international community to "talk to people in Russia"Image: Florian Görner/DW

Pivovarov is a former director of Open Russia, a now-defunct opposition group linked to longtime Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who was also freed from Russian incarceration in a prisoner swap brokered by Germany years ago.

Pivovarov said there were "thousands of people in Russian prisons" and that "I think they would be happy to hear that it's possible to be saved." 

Alexei Navalny honored

The three Russian opposition figures also paid tribute to the late Alexei Navalny, a prominent critic of Putin, who died in an Arctic prison in February.

Navalny had become "accustomed to the normality of torture," Pivovarov said.

"The fact that Alexei Navalny is not with us is a crime committed by Putin, who bears direct responsibility for his murder," Yashin said.

He said an officer of Russia's FSB security service told him that if he returned to Russia his "days will end like Navalny's."

Kara-Murza said when the plane departed Moscow on Thursday, his FSB guard told him, "Look out the window. It is the last time you see your motherland. But I told him, 'I am sure that I will return to Russia — a free Russia.'"

Kara-Murza holds up his Russian passport as he speaks to reporters in Bonn
Kara-Murza said he refused to request a pardon from Putin who he called a "murderer" and "war criminal"Image: Florian Görner/DW

He also speculated Navalny might have been alive had the West agreed the swap with the Kremlin sooner. Navalny was reportedly also meant to be among the released political prisoners but died before the deal could be finished.

"It's hard for me not to think that, maybe if these processes had somehow moved quicker ... if there had been less resistance that the Scholz government had to overcome in terms of freeing Krasikov, then maybe Alexei would have been here and free," he said.

He, however, added he was sure the deal had saved "16 human lives."

Edited by: Sean Sinico