Russian-controlled court jails woman for buying Ukrainian war bonds


April 23 (Reuters) - A ⁠woman living in a Russian-controlled part of southern ⁠Ukraine has been found guilty of treason and ‌sentenced to 14 years in prison for buying war bonds to support the Ukrainian military, the court that convicted her said on ​Thursday.

The Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia District Court said ⁠the woman had ⁠used a Ukrainian mobile app to purchase bonds worth 270,080 ⁠roubles ($3,600), ‌and had been caught by the FSB security service.

It identified her only by the initial ⁠B, and said she was a Russian ​citizen. People ‌living in parts of Ukraine that Russian forces have ⁠captured in ​more than four years of war have effectively been forced to take Russian citizenship if they want to ⁠retain access to healthcare, pensions and ​property rights.

Human rights group Memorial, which Russia this month branded an extremist movement, named the woman as 66-year-old Larisa ⁠Belyayeva, a doctor from the village of Lyubimovka.

Ukraine began issuing war bonds in February 2022, immediately after Russia's full-scale invasion, in order to fund its defence.

They have ​been promoted as a patriotic investment ⁠with the potential for attractive tax-free yields - currently up ​to 17.45% for bonds denominated ‌in Ukrainian hryvnia, and more than ​4% for dollar-denominated paper.

($1 = 74.9000 roubles)

(Reporting by Mark Trevelyan in London; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)

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