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Russia must protect faithful in Pussy Riot case: Putin

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Pussy Riot members, from left, Maria Alekhina, Yekaterina Samutsevich, and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova show the court's verdict as they sit in a glass cage at a courtroom in Moscow. Photo: AP

President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday Russia was obliged to protect feelings of religious believers in the case of opposition punk rockers Pussy Riot who were jailed for performing in a Moscow church.

“The state is obliged to protect the feelings of the faithful,” Putin said in an interview with the state-controlled Russia Today channel, accusing the women of staging an “orgy” in churches.

Putin said protecting religious believers was especially important given the repression of the Russian Orthodox Church under Soviet rule. “The country has very grave memories of the initial period of Soviet rule when a huge number of priests suffered,” he said.

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“Many churches were destroyed and all our traditional faiths suffered huge damage.”

He lashed out at the morality of the three girls whose two year jail terms on hooliganism charges has sparked global concern.

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“First they went to the Yelokhovo Cathedral and conducted an orgy there and then they went to the other cathedral and had another orgy,” he said, referring to Pussy Riot’s most controversial performance in Moscow’s Christ the Saviour Cathedral.

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