In 1968, like dozens of others, Lavut added his name to an open letter in defense of the poet
Alexander Ginzburg. Ginzburg had been arrested as one of the compilers, with
Yuri Galanskov, of the
White Book documenting
the trial of writers
Andrei Sinyavsky and
Yuli Daniel. In May 1969 Lavut joined the
Action Group for the Defense of Human Rights, the first such organization in Soviet history. Together with other members, he signed an open letter to the
UN Human Rights Commission. He lost his job in November that year. Of Lavut's 14 co-signatories, ten would be arrested later and imprisoned. It documented the extensive human rights violations committed by the Soviet government and the ever-expanding samizdat publications (political tracts, fiction, translations) circulating among the critical and opposition-minded. Each issue was produced as a few dozen typewritten copies, passed on to friends and then replicated in the manner of a chain-letter. After chief editor
Sergei Kovalev was arrested in 1975 and imprisoned for his work on the
Chronicle, Lavut became one of the principal editors, both as a contributor and in compiling and finalising the contents of many issues. This continued until his own arrest in 1980. Lavut was particularly active in campaigning on behalf of the
Crimean Tatars, an ethnic group forcibly exiled to Central Asia under Stalin in 1944 and not permitted to return once the Soviet dictator was dead. After their champion
Pyotr Grigorenko was expelled from the USSR in 1977, Lavut became one of their main contacts in Moscow. He had already dedicated one entire issue of the
Chronicle to their cause.
Arrest, imprisonment, and exile (1980–1986) On 29 April 1980, Lavut was arrested and charged with
Anti-Soviet agitation under Article 190-1 of the RSFSR Criminal Code: "the dissemination of knowingly false fabrications discrediting the Soviet social and political system". The prosecution argued that Lavut "participated in the discussion, production, signing and distribution on the territory of the
USSR and abroad of knowingly false fabrications ... about alleged violations of civil rights, of the
use of psychiatry for political ends." He was also accused of possessing and distributing copies of
The Gulag Archipelago by
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. During his trial at the Moscow People's Court, Lavut admitted distributing material but claimed that his actions fell within the remit of the law. The trial became the subject of a memorandum by the dissident human rights organization
Moscow Helsinki Group;
Andrei Sakharov included Lavut's name in an open appeal to colleagues. Convicted and sentenced to the maximum term under Article 190-1 of three years in a labour camp Lavut was held for some time in
Butyrka prison (Moscow), before being sent to a camp in the
Khabarovsk Region (Soviet Far East). When his initial sentence ended in April 1983, he was not released, but given a further three-year term of internal exile. In 1986 Lavut refused to sign a statement agreeing to cease all political activity (cf
Tatyana Velikanova). On completion of his term of exile Lavut was able to return to Moscow but not allowed to travel abroad. He resumed work as a
programmer, this time at the Central Geophysical Expedition. In 1988, Andrei Sakharov succeeded in obtaining official permission for Lavut to join a Soviet-American commission on civil and political rights and go to Washington. == Return to Moscow ==