Jail for radical Russian artist who set Bank of France on fire

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PARIS, Jan 11, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A court jailed an exiled Russian artist
Thursday for setting fire to the facade of a French central bank building, a
performance that was filmed and circulated on social media.

Pyotr Pavlensky, 34, received a one-year jail term and two years suspended
for the stunt, but should walk free, having already served 11 months in
custody.

His former partner, Oksana Shalygina, received a two-year sentence, 16
months of which were suspended.

But Pavlensky was also ordered to pay 21,678 euros ($25,000) in damages to
the Banque de France. “Never!” he said in Russian.

Pavlensky fled to France and was given asylum in 2017 after several
provocative protests drew the ire of Russian authorities, not least one in
which he nailed his scrotum to Moscow’s Red Square.

In France, Pavlensky kept up his work. In October 2017 he and Oksana
Shalygina torched the front door of the Paris Bastille branch of the Banque
de France.

Locating it on the Place de la Bastille, where the French Revolution began
in 1789, was “historically shameful”, he argued, adding: “Bankers have taken
the place of monarchs.”

They were convicted of “dangerous destruction of property”.

Shalygina had been freed ahead of trial in January 2018, but the court at
first deemed Pavlensky a flight risk and ordered him held in custody. He was
eventually released last September.

After making global headlines with his Red Square scrotum performance
titled “Fixation” in 2013.

2016, a Russian court fined him after he doused the doors of Russia’s FSB
secret police headquarters with petrol and set them on fire.

Pavlensky has also sewn his lips together to protest the jailing of members
of the feminist Russian punk group Pussy Riot, wrapped himself in barbed
wire, and chopped off part of his ear.

In December 2016 Russian authorities said a theatre actress had accused
Pavlensky of sexual assault, charges he denounced as fabricated.

He says he risks 10 years in a prison camp if returned to Russia.