The two remaining imprisoned Pussy Riot members were released from prison Monday under Russia’s new amnesty law.
The pair slammed the move, and accused President Vladimir Putin of freeing them as a public relations effort meant to smooth out international human rights criticisims ahead of the winter Olympics.
“This is not an amnesty. This is a hoax and a PR move,” one of the members, Maria Alekhina told a Russian television station according to the AP. She said if she’d been given the option, she’d have finished out her sentence, which ends in March.
“I think this is an attempt to improve the image of the current government, a little, before the Sochi Olympics — particularly for the Western Europeans,” she told the New York Times. “But I don’t consider this humane or merciful.”
“The border between being free and not free is very thin in Russia, a totalitarian state,” Nadezhda Tolokonnikova told reporters outside her prison, according to Reuters, after shouting “Russia without Putin!”
The two women were released after Putin ordered the Parliament to pass a bill granting amnesty to those who have commited non-violent crimes.









