In Moscow, a fifth-grader was taken to the police department because of an avatar with yellow and blue colors. The director denounced her

In Moscow, law enforcement officers took a fifth grader to the police department because of an avatar with yellow and blue flowers, and the officers also came to the family home. This is reported by OVD-Info with reference to the director's appeal to the head of the Department of Internal Affairs for the Nekrasovka district.

In a statement, the director spoke well of the student's academic performance and character, but asked "to examine the living conditions of the family and establish cause-and-effect relationships of such a child's behavior, his civic position." In addition, the director asked the police to “influence the educational position” of the mother so that she would not “influence” her daughter with “the conviction of her own political views” and would not encourage “the discussion of interethnic and political issues in the children's team.”

Employees of the "School in Nekrasovka" and social pedagogues talked to the schoolgirl's mother. They wondered why the girl did not attend the lessons "Conversations about the important." It also turned out that one of the parents of her classmates complained about the girl because she published a survey “about peace and war” in a chat with classmates.

On the morning of October 5, the police came to the school for the student. According to the organization, while the mother was on her way to her daughter, a police officer, juvenile inspector D. V. Mzhelskaya asked the girl what her mother was doing and how the family was spending time. As a result, the officers took her to the police separately from her mother, and the security forces “rudely led her mother to the exit” while the girl was crying. In addition to the police, employees of the Center for Combating Extremism were present at the department, who read the messages on the woman’s phone, as well as five employees of the Harmony family center and guardianship service. In total, the family stayed in the department for three hours.

After some time, they came home to the family and, without presenting documents and without introducing themselves, studied the correspondence and search history on the schoolgirl's phone and laptop and rummaged through the bed linen. The juvenile affairs inspector told the mother that the family would be summoned to a commission for preventive registration.

After Putin announced a “partial” mobilization on September 21, military enlistment offices and administrative buildings began to be set on fire in Russia. Against this background, the General Staff of Russia stated that the arson of military registration and enlistment offices would be regarded as terrorist attacks and punished with imprisonment of up to 15 years. One of the last arsons was committed by an eleventh grader in Kazan, on October 5, the Sovetsky District Court sent her under house arrest. Idel.Realii reported that the schoolgirl was brought to court in handcuffs. The criminal case was initiated under Part 3 of Art. 30, part 2, art. 167 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (attempt to destroy or damage property), the maximum penalty for this charge is 3 years 8 months in prison. When detained by the police, the girl stated that she opposed the war and mobilization.

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