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Russia: Dozens detained for peacefully protesting prosecution of feminist blogger
Yulia Tsvetkova is charged with “pornography dissemination” because she runs a social media group that features artwork depicting vulvas, celebrating female bodies, and protesting taboos around female anatomy and menstruation.
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Russia: “Fake news” law and spurious prosecutions used to silence independent journalists
“During the coronavirus pandemic the country’s media regulator has issued dozens of take down and correction orders and threatened to block news websites over coverage, while one journalist is under criminal investigation as a result of an article she published.”
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Alleged Chechen plot to murder Georgian TV journalist Giorgi Gabunia
A Russian hitman was allegedly sent by Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov to target TV host Giorgi Gabunia. Gabunia hired bodyguards last year after he was threatened by Kadyrov. Death squads from the Russian Caucasus have repeatedly targeted critics in Europe.
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COVID-19: The challenges for imprisoned journalists observing Ramadan
In many countries, prisoners rely on their families for food and medicine while behind bars. But this year, as families have been barred from visiting their loved ones due to COVID-19, jailed Muslim journalists have to cope with fasting on even fewer resources than before.
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Moscow reacts to COVID-19 by extending surveillance of citizens
Officials are forging ahead with installing one of the world’s biggest surveillance camera systems equipped with facial recognition technology. The system is ostensibly intended to help in the fight against COVID-19 and ensure that everyone placed under self-quarantine stays off the streets.
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Russian media regulator orders two outlets to take down COVID-19 reports
The state media regulator, Roskomnadzor, ordered liberal radio station ‘Ekho Moskvy’ and independent news site ‘Govorit Magadan’ to remove articles about the COVID-19 outbreak from their websites and social media.
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Authorities raid human rights defenders’ homes and office in Dagestan
Police in southern Russia raided the homes and office of activists who provide legal and psychological assistance to survivors of domestic violence.
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Grozny: Group attacks human rights lawyer Marina Dubrovina and journalist Elena Milashina
“There is every reason to believe that Chechen authorities are behind this vile attack,” said Human Rights Watch. “For more than a decade, they have been wielding a war on human rights defenders, jailing them, destroying their offices, and forcing them to leave Chechnya.”
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Journalist barred from entering Crimea for 34 years
Taras Ibragimov is just one of the Ukrainian journalists whom the Russian authorities have banned from entering Crimea. Barring independent reporters from the peninsula is, in part, an attempt to stop the flow of news about Russia’s crackdown on Crimean Tatar activists.
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Russia escalates persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses
At least 313 people are currently facing charges, are on trial, or have been convicted of criminal “extremism” for engaging in Jehovah’s Witnesses’ activities, or are suspects in such cases. There have been at least 780 house raids since 2017.
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Everything you wanted to know about internet censorship in Russia
A new RSF report, “Taking Control? Internet Censorship and Surveillance in Russia”, traces the development of internet censorship in Russia since the mass protests against Vladimir Putin in 2011/12.
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Russia: Criminal charges and threats after gay man answers children’s questions on YouTube
Maxim Pankratov was threatened after he took part in a YouTube chat show where children asked him about his life as a gay man; the YouTube channel was charged with “gay propaganda” and the authorities allege that the show amounted to sexual abuse.
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Russia should drop bogus terrorism charges against journalist Svetlana Prokopyeva
Svetlana Prokopyeva is facing a lengthy prison sentence for “justifying terrorism” after she suggested that growing up in a repressive state could be a factor in radicalising young people.
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Russia: New internet law massively curtails Internet freedom
Russia’s “sovereign internet” law came into effect this month. It gives the government virtually unlimited ability and authority to monitor all Internet activity, and allows for colossal, extrajudicial blocking of speech and information without transparency.
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Russia: Police target press reporting on journalist charged with “justifying terrorism”
Svetlana Prokopyeva was charged with “justifying terrorism” on 20 September. In early October, authorities summoned editors from “Ekho Moskvy” and “Pskovskaya Lenta Novostey” after each outlet published an open letter from Prokopyeva about her case.
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Russia jails Crimean Tatar blogger for 2.5 years on bogus terrorism charges
The charge against Nariman Memedeminov stems from videos he posted of Hizb ut-Tahrir activities. Hizb ut-Tahrir seeks to establish a caliphate, but not via violence; it is banned in Russia as a terrorist organisation but operates legally in Ukraine.