“Stay in the car,” Yuri says. He looks out the window, up at the grey Soviet-era tower block we're idling outside. An old woman is staring out the window. “She's looking at us. She's suspicious.”
Eugeny and his wife, Lyudmilla, have already gone inside. But Yuri (who, like everyone quoted in this article, has asked to be identified by first name only for security reasons) is worried that entering as a group will attract attention. Attention means somebody might call the police. And when you're a Jehovah's Witness in Russia — labeled by the government as a member of an “extremist” sect, the same designation they use for neo-Nazis and ISIS members — dealing with the police is the last thing you need.
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