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The defamation trial of a Russian journalist whose savage beating left him permanently crippled has been postponed after he failed to appear in court, RFE/RL's Russian Service reports.

Mikhail Beketov is being sued by Vladimir Strelchenko, mayor of the small town of Khimki outside of Moscow, for libel over articles published in "Khimkinskaya pravda," where Beketov served as chief editor.

Beketov, 52, was left severely handicapped after a beating at the hands of unknown assailants in November 2008. Beketov was discovered lying in a coma more than a day after the attackers "broke his skull, smashed the fingers of both hands, broke his legs, and left him for dead in the freezing cold," the Committee to Protect Journalists noted.

His condition means he must travel to court by ambulance, accompanied by doctors, at a cost of 6,000 rubles ($196) per trip according to Ekho Moskvy.

Supporters have launched a collection drive to help him cover medical and defense costs.

The attack took place outside of Beketov's home after he wrote several articles challenging Khimki authorities not to cut down a large swath of forest to build a new Moscow-St. Petersburg highway. Many of Beketov's articles were critical of Strelchenko.

Last month, police closed their investigation into the attack against Beketov without making any arrests.
Opposition activist Maxim Dashuk finishes sentence of almost two years and five months.
Opposition activist Maxim Dashuk finishes sentence of almost two years and five months.
MINSK -- Belarusian opposition youth activist Maksim Dashuk has been released after serving two years and five months of "restricted freedom" for participating in an unsanctioned street demonstration, RFE/RL's Belarus Service reports.

The 19-year-old was one of 13 people found guilty in the spring of 2008 by a Minsk court for participating in a protest in January 2008 against the government's crackdown on small businesses. Some 3,000 business owners and their sympathizers took part in the protest.

In May 2009, Amnesty International designated Dashuk and some of the other youths sentenced for their participation in the demonstration as political prisoners.

Dashuk's sentence entailed a 2200-0600 curfew, during which he was required to be at home. Dashuk, who worked to help support his widowed mother, a small business owner, was several times found by the court to be in violation of the curfew. His original sentence of 18 months was, therefore, extended to 29 months.

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