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Russie-Libertés also is helping to organize rallies in Marseille, Nice, Lyons and Montpellier. Wearing balaclavas, activists protested earlier this month on the iconic Alexander III bridge, named after the Russian czar who was France's ally in the 1890s. Prokopyev said that he and his peers "want Russia to be a normal country" and be able to elect a president "who doesn't make the country where we were born a laughingstock." In New York, Friday's protest will take place outside the Russian Consulate and later on Times Square. "It's absurd that this case is being treated as criminal, while in any other civilized country that would be merely an administrative offense," said Xenia Grubstein, a 31-year-old journalist helping to organize the New York protest. She said the hope was that the louder people speak out against the Pussy Riot case, the greater the chance that the verdict will be fair. A protest is also planned in Washington, where last month punk rockers and arts activists rallied outside the Russian Embassy. The U.S. State Department has expressed concern about what it called the "politically motivated prosecution of the Russian opposition and pressure on those who express dissenting views." In France, Culture Minister Aurelie Filippetti last week issued a statement expressing concern that artistic freedom was on trial. A German cross-party group of lawmakers sent a letter to the Russian ambassador calling the five months the band members have spent in custody and the possible prison terms "draconian and disproportionate" punishment. "In a secular and pluralistic state, peaceful artistic activities -- even if they may be seen as a provocation
-- should not lead to accusations of a serious crime and long prison sentences," the lawmakers said in the letter, which more than 100 members of parliament signed. The international press has been full of critical reports from the trial. One of Germany's most influential magazines, Der Spiegel, featured the band on its cover: a picture of Tolokonnikova behind bars and the headline "Putin's Russia."
[Associated
Press;
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