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Controversial Russian Jewish artist missing in Berlin
Updated: 27/Mar/2008 12:09
Anna Mikhalchuk, 52, is married to philosopher Michail Ryklin, who wrote a letter to the police saying that he had received several anonymous threats in the past.
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BERLIN (AFP)---A Russian artist who faced charges three years ago of "inflaming religious hatred" over a Moscow exhibition has gone missing in Berlin, where she has lived since November, police said Thursday.

 
Anna Mikhalchuk, who is married to an outspoken Kremlin critic, went out Friday afternoon telling her husband she planned to run errands but has not been seen since, police in the German capital said in a statement.
  
"The woman, who is considered reliable, left her home near Lietzen Lake Friday around 3:30 pm," the statement said.
  
"Since then there has been no sign of her," it said, adding that Mikhalchuk speaks fluent English but only broken German.
  
Mikhalchuk, 52, is married to philosopher Michail Ryklin, who wrote a letter to the police Saturday saying that he had received several anonymous threats in the past, the Berlin daily Der Tagesspiegel reported.
  
"A politically motivated or anti-Semitic crime cannot be ruled out," Ryklin wrote in excerpts from the letter quoted by Der Tagesspiegel.
 
The couple is Jewish.
  
Mikhalchuk, who is also known as Anna Alchuk, was acquitted in March 2005 on charges of inflaming religious hatred stemming from a controversial art exhibition featuring works such as a naked woman nailed to a cross.
  
Two associates -- the director of the Moscow museum where the exhibition was shown and an employee at the institution -- were convicted and each fined 100,000 rubles (4,300 dollars).
  
Human Rights Watch said the verdicts highlighted "a climate of growing intolerance for freedom of expression in Russia."
  
Ryklin, 60, is the former research director of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow and is currently a guest professor for Slavic studies at Berlin's Humboldt University.
  
He has frequently accused the Russian government of muzzling political opponents and curtailing civil rights.
 
 

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