Trial of Russian Playwright and Director Moves Behind Closed Doors

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A judge in Moscow ruled Thursday that the trial of a director and writer charged with "justifying terrorism" in an award-winning play will
continue behind closed doors after the prosecution said witnesses were being threatened on social media.Director Yevgeniya Berkovich and
writer Svetlana Petriychuk are standing trial at a military court over their 2021 play about Russian women lured to marry Islamic State
militants in Syria.Judge Yury Massin accepted a request from prosecutors to hold the rest of the trial "in a closed format," the state-run
TASS news agency reported, after which journalists were asked to leave.The prosecution had asked for the court to be closed to the press
because of alleged threatening comments toward trial participants on social media
The women and their lawyers said they opposed closing the trial.At a previous hearing this month, a witness who asked for his identity to be
hidden to protect his safety said he had secretly filmed the play and taken footage to police.If convicted, the women face up to seven years
in prison
They pleaded not guilty at a hearing last month."I staged the play to prevent terrorism," Berkovich told the court as the prosecutor accused
the women of supporting "extreme forms of Islam."The women's arrest in May last year sent shockwaves through Russia's artistic community,
which has faced unprecedented pressure from the Kremlin since Russia sent troops to Ukraine.Their play, "Finist The Brave Falcon," was
on their return to Russia
It was awarded two Golden Mask awards, Russia's top theater prize.Berkovich has also written poems criticizing the Russian invasion of
Ukraine
Her supporters have said they believe she may be being punished for her poems.Human rights group Amnesty International has said the two
women are "being targeted simply for exercising the right to freedom of expression" and called for their immediate release.