From the BBC:
“Vladimir Bukovsky: Soviet-era
dissident dies in Cambridge”
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. 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. 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. 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 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. 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. "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 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."
^ It was dissidents like Bukovsky
who worked both inside and outside the Soviet Union to show the crimes of the
Communist Dictatorship. The men and women like Bukovsky still haven’t received
the praise they are due within Russia (not surprising since the majority of the
former Communist officials are still in office) but the rest of the world knows
and cares about the role of the Soviet dissidents. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50206084
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