In
less than three years, Pussy Riot has morphed from a little-known
feminist protest band to an international cause celebre. As its two
jailed members are freed from prison under an amnesty, the BBC News
website recaps the group's story so far.
Controversial performance
Pussy Riot was founded in 2011, but shot to greater prominence
after appearing in Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in February
2012, to perform an obscenity-laced song called Punk Prayer which
attacked the Orthodox Church's support for President Vladimir Putin.
Arrest
Several weeks after the cathedral stunt - which was was broken
up by church officials - Maria Alyokhina, Yekaterina Samutsevich and
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova were arrested and charged with "hooliganism
motivated by religious hatred".
They were held without bail until their trial in late July
when they were convicted and sentenced to two years in prison.
Samutsevich was freed on probation in October 2012, but Tolokonnikova
and Alyokhina remained in jail.
Protest
The case divided Russia with many feeling the women were being
too harshly treated and made examples of as part of attempts to clamp
down on opposition to the government. But others felt their actions were
a gross offence to the Orthodox faith.
Cause celebre
The trio's fate attracted much international attention.
Musicians like Sting, the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Madonna and Yoko Ono
called for their release, while human rights groups designated them
prisoners of conscience. Pussy Riot's distinctive coloured balaclavas
became a widely-recognised symbol.
Prison regime
The women - both mothers of young children - faced tough
conditions inside Russia's prison system and had a number of parole
requests turned down. Tolokonnikova (above left) complained of abuses by
prison staff and went on hunger strike.
Amnesty
The pair's sentences were due to end in March 2014, but their
release became inevitable in December after an amnesty law was signed by
the Russian parliament, covering at least 20,000 prisoners, including
mothers.
Release
Mr Putin's critics see the amnesty as a bid to avoid
controversy overshadowing Russia's hosting of the Winter Olympics in
February. Maria Alyokhina - the first of the duo to be freed from jail -
told a Russian TV channel that the amnesty was a PR stunt and she would
rather have remained in prison.
Tolokonnikova, gesturing as she walked out of a prison hospital
in Siberia, said that together with Alyokhina she would set up a human
rights group to help prisoners.
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