Teenagers convicted of terrorism in St. Petersburg for minor vandalism
Two 15-year-olds, Jegor Lauskis and Artem Doronin, were convicted of terrorism by a military court in St. Petersburg. The boys received sentences of two and four years in a penal colony. This was the punishment for setting fire to a relay cabinet valued at around £6. In the country, they were considered terrorists and were exemplarily punished.
11 August 2024 15:31
Further reports from Russia are alarming. According to local propaganda, the two teenagers were preparing a terrorist attack in St. Petersburg.
According to the investigation by the Russian prosecutor's office, the alleged "attack" took place on 16 September 2023. Two 15-year-olds set fire to a relay cabinet near the "Lakhta" railway station in St. Petersburg. The damage caused by this "attack" was valued at 758 roubles (approximately £6).
Students in Russia were convicted of "terrorism." There was nothing related to terrorism in their actions. Eighth-grader Artem Doronin was sentenced to four years in a colony for attempting to set fire to a relay cabinet, and his friend Jegor Lauskis was sentenced to two years. Grass burning was considered "terrorism," and the damage amounted to less than £8 - reported the Nexta agency.
According to Russian propaganda, the teenagers were recruited by the Ukrainian Armed Forces and encouraged to set fire to a locomotive in their hometown. When they refused, they were allegedly blackmailed with threats that screenshots of their conversations on a messaging app would be handed over to the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation (FSB).
Cornered, the teenagers allegedly decided to stage a "terrorist attack." They set fire to a relay box near the station in St. Petersburg.
Both teenagers were detained on 18 September 2023. A phone and a laptop were found during a search of their homes. The screens allegedly displayed the Ukrainian coat of arms and flag. In the browser history of one of the computers, the prosecutor's office found: "numerous queries about praising Hitler and Ukrainian nationalism, Nazi leaders, and searches for the names Stepan Bandera and Volodymyr Zelensky."
In April 2024, Doronin and Lauskis became the youngest "terrorists" listed as extremists and terrorists in Russia.