======================================================================
Rule #1: YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
======================================================================


Fans Confronted by Riot Police at Canceled Concert
By Sergey Chernov
The St. Petersburg Times
Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Eighteen music fans were detained Sunday as hundreds protested against the
last-minute cancellation of a Cannibal Corpse show outside the Kosmonavt
music club in St. Petersburg. The organizer, the Moscow-based agency Motley
Concerts, claimed the cancellation was caused by unspecified “technical
reasons,” but the fans believed it was done under pressure from the
authorities.

The American death metal band’s St. Petersburg concert was set to be the
last in their eight-date Russian tour in support of their 13th studio
album, “A Skeletal Domain.”

Although the band’s five previous Russian tours went ahead without any
problems, this year’s tour was marred by controversy caused by a massive
campaign of formal complaints from Orthodox activists about alleged
“Satanism” and “extremism” in Cannibal Corpse’s lyrics. Out of the eight
planned concerts, the band managed to play only four.

On Oct. 11, the band’s concert in Moscow was canceled when people were
already in the venue. Before that, a concert in Ufa scheduled for Oct. 5
was canceled when the venue abruptly closed “for technical reasons.” On
Oct. 10, Cannibal Corpse’s concert in Nizhny Novgorod was shut down by
armed masked police officers 30 minutes after it had started. A number of
fans were detained and taken for compulsory drug tests. In a petition to
the head of administration of Nizhny Novgorod, fans wrote that the true
reason for the anti-drug operation was to stop the concert, which they
believe was an act of censorship, which is prohibited by the Russian
constitution.

Neither the organizer nor the venues in the four cities admitted any
pressure from authorities and the band did not make any statement about the
cancellations.

On Sunday, fans were not let into the venue even though it was supposed to
open at least an hour before the concert’s scheduled 8 p.m. start. When
asked, the guard at the doors said both the public and guests would be
allowed to enter “later.”

When several hundred stood around Kosmonavt 25 minutes before the scheduled
start, a young man brought a notice from the organizers and read it aloud.
It said the concert had been canceled for technical reasons but ticket
holders were welcome to a signing session with the band and to spend an
evening in the venue.

The notice then went from one person to another until a fan set it on fire
to cheers from the crowd.

Despite the invitation, the doors were still closed, leading disappointed
fans to crowd around near the entrance. Soon they were chanting the band’s
name as well as profane insults toward Moscow Orthodox activist Dmitry
Tsorionov, also known as Enteo, and Legislative Assembly deputy Vitaly
Milonov, whom they saw as responsible for the cancellation. The fans
criticized the Kremlin’s current policies of isolation from the West and
promotion of traditionalism.

One fan shouted an offensive anti-President Vladimir Putin slogan while
another commented sarcastically about the official line of Russia “rising
from its knees.”

“I would not love the Russian Orthodox Church more for this,” one fan said.

People discussed how they had been waiting for months for the concert and
bought expensive tickets, while others had come from other cities and had
to take days off from their jobs and find a place to stay in St. Petersburg.

Although there had only been one police vehicle parked near the venue
initially, OMON riot police started to arrive at the site at 8:15 p.m.
Bottles flew at the officers while people expressed their disappointment
and outrage at the treatment. Cannibal Corpse’s music played loudly from
one of the cars parked near the venue.

The OMON police retreated into their truck to put on helmets and take
batons but did not immediately intervene, instead maneuvering in the street
near the venue, blocking and unblocking it, as bottles kept coming and
various fans protested in different ways. People flooded the street and
passing cars had their tires pierced by broken glass.

The first arrests occurred at around 8:30 p.m., when a dozen officers
rushed at two fans standing at a distance from Kosmonavt, beat them with
batons and dragged them to the police vehicle. A video posted by a fan
showed them apparently being beaten with a baton inside the vehicle as
well. An hour later there were much fewer people in the street, with some
heading home and others lining up for the signing session in the venue,
which eventually started to let people enter, although very slowly after
multiple checks.

According to the police, the 18 detained fans were charged either with
“disorderly conduct” or with “being drunk in public,” offenses that are
punishable by fines or up to 15 days in prison.

http://www.sptimes.ru/story/40976?page=2#top
________________________________________________
Send list submissions to: Marxism@lists.csbs.utah.edu
Set your options at: 
http://lists.csbs.utah.edu/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to