MOSCOW (AP) A protester arrested after a mass anti-Kremlin demonstration last year was found guilty Tuesday of beating a policeman and sent for forced psychiatric treatment, a ruling human rights activists decried as a return to the Soviet practice of using punitive psychiatry against dissidents.
Mikhail Kosenko was one of 28 people rounded up after clashes broke out between protesters and police on the eve of Vladimir Putin's inauguration for a third term as Russia's president.
Kosenko was diagnosed in 2001 with mild schizophrenia, but his condition was controlled by medication and he had never shown any aggression, according to a statement from Human Rights Watch.
The prosecution, however, said a psychiatric evaluation found that Kosenko was unable to realize the "public danger of his actions" due to a "chronic mental disorder."
Human Rights Watch not only objected to the use of forced psychiatric treatment but also questioned the charges brought against Kosenko.