MOSCOW: The Kremlin on Wednesday insisted the arrest of top theatre and film director Kirill Serebrennikov over alleged embezzlement of state funding was not about politics or censorship of the arts.
Dmitry Peskov — President Vladimir Putin's spokesman — told journalists, "In this case, you should not waste your breath talking about some kind of politicisation, censorship and so on. Such discussions are absolutely inappropriate and have nothing to do with purely financial questions."
The Kremlin spokesman was giving his first in-depth comment on the case.
Serebrennikov — the creative director of the Gogol Centre Theatre in Moscow who has also staged productions at the Bolshoi Theatre — is under house arrest after being charged last week with defrauding the state of 68 million rubles ($1.15 million/977,000 euros) in funding for a theatrical project, for which he could face a decade in jail. He denies any guilt.
Peskov said the charge showed simply that "state funds need to be accounted for".
The case has caused an uproar in the art world in Russia and beyond, with many linking it to Serebrennikov's criticism of increasing state censorship of the arts.
Peskov, however, dismissed the support Serebrennikov has received from colleagues in the theatre.
"The support from colleagues… is very understandable, but probably you should not link this support directly to those questions that investigators have for Serebrennikov," he said.
Chulpan Khamatova — one of Russia's best-known actresses and philanthropists who once made a video supporting Putin's election campaign — spoke out against his arrest at an awards ceremony on Wednesday.
"My colleague, my friend, is under house arrest, in my view completely unjustly and unlawfully. I am very afraid," she said.
A court has detained Serebrennikov under house arrest in Moscow until October 19, despite numerous offers of bail from his supporters, including the sister of billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov.
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