And  Maria Alekhina, Ekaterina Samutsevich, and Nadezhda Tolokonninkova’s  crime—a 1-1/2-minute “punk prayer” performed at the holiest place in the  Russian Orthodox Church asking the Virgin Mary to expel Putin from the  Kremlin—wasn’t answered with a miracle. Putin is still in power, though  sending the young women to prison has tainted his reputation further and brought Pussy Riot worldwide fame.
  As  the guilty verdict was read, crowds of protesters filled the Moscow  streets near the court chanting “Free Pussy Riot!” Colorful balaclavas  appeared across the city center on monuments to Lomonosov, Pushkin, and  his wife Goncharova, while in London a hail of stones pinged against  the Russian Embassy building.
“By  putting modern art performers behind bars, Putin set the parameters for  limiting freedom of expression and signaled a powerful crackdown on  civil society,” said Human Rights Watch’s Rachel Denber, in Moscow  observing the case, as she watched police detain dozens of protesters  outside the courthouse.
Hailed  in the West as “sheroes” for braving a repressive society, Pussy Riot  has infuriated the Kremlin for months. Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry  Rogozin called Madonna “a slut” for supporting the punk band, and  Chechen President and Ramzan Kadyrov, who has said he believes Putin was  sent to Russia by God, compared the girls to “pigs.”
But  there is little doubt the group’s church stunt was provocative and  deeply offensive to Russian believers. Senior clerics in the church and  members of Putin’s government have hinted that the women could not have  thought up the act on their own and suggest a sinister plot involving  foreign governments and the media. “Putin has been under colossal  pressure from a well-planned, anti-Russian campaign focused on  discrediting the institution of the Russian church and weakening the  Russian people,” said Sergei Markov, a pro-Kremlin political expert and  deputy rector of Plekhanov University.
The women smiled as they heard the words “guilty” and “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred.”
Inside  the courtroom, the three women who challenged Putin and the Russian  Orthodox Church looked hardly taller than 5 feet and appeared pale and  exhausted after five months behind bars. They smiled as they heard the  words “guilty” and “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred.”  Alekhina, Samutsevich, and Tolokonninkova had said earlier in court that  they believe in God but hate the idea of Russian Patriarch Kirill’s  endorsing Putin’s candidacy earlier this year.
In  the three months since he returned to the presidency, Putin has  directed at least 19 political cases to the Russian courts and allowed  the parliament to toughen laws on street protesters, foreign-funded  NGOs, and criminal libel against journalists, a bill that even his  political ally Dmitry Medvedev once vetoed. Pussy Riot had feared the  worst. “Virgin Mary save us from Putin!” is a crucial line in one of  their songs. Says Yevgenia Rakina, another member of the band: “I am  convinced that Putin is afraid the Virgin Mary will actually take his  power away from him.”
 
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