Kremlin’s wanted list includes Russian American journalist Masha Gessen

Kremlin’s wanted list includes Russian American journalist Masha Gessen

Russian ​police have put prominent Russian American journalist and⁢ author Masha Gessen on a wanted list after opening‍ a criminal case against them on charges of spreading false information about the Russian army.

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It is the‌ latest step in an unrelenting crackdown against dissent in Russia that has intensified since⁢ the ‍Kremlin invaded Ukraine more⁤ than 21 months ago, on 24 February 2022.

The independent Russian news outlet Mediazona was the first⁣ to report on Friday that Gessen’s profile has‌ appeared on the online wanted list‍ of Russia’s interior ministry, and ⁢the Associated Press was able to confirm that it was. ⁤It ‍was not clear ⁣from ⁣the profile when ⁣exactly Gessen was⁣ added to the list.

Russian ⁤media reported last month that a ⁣criminal case against Gessen, an award-winning author and an outspoken critic of the​ Russian⁣ president,⁤ Vladimir Putin, was launched over ⁢an interview⁣ with the‌ prominent Russian⁤ journalist Yury Dud.

In the interview, which was released on YouTube in ⁣September 2022 and ⁤has since ‌been viewed more than 6.5m times,​ the two ‌among ⁤other things discussed atrocities ⁤by Russian armed forces in Bucha, a Ukrainian town near Kyiv that‍ was briefly occupied by the Russian forces.

After Ukrainian troops retook it, they ⁢found the ​bodies of ‌men, women and children‍ on the streets, in yards and homes, and in mass graves, ‍with ⁣some showing signs of torture. Russian officials have vehemently⁣ denied their forces were responsible and have⁢ prosecuted a number‍ of Russian public figures‌ for speaking out⁣ about Bucha, ​handing some lengthy prison terms.

Those ⁤prosecutions​ were ​carried out under a‌ new law ​Moscow adopted days after‍ sending troops to⁤ Ukraine that effectively criminalized any public expression about‌ the war deviating from the official narrative.

Between late February 2022 and early ⁤this month, 19,844⁤ people have been detained for​ speaking out or⁤ protesting against the war while 776 people have ⁤been implicated‍ in criminal ⁤cases over their anti-war stance, according to​ the OVD-Info rights group, which tracks political⁣ arrests and provides legal aid.

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Gessen, who holds dual Russian and American citizenships and ⁢lives in the US, is unlikely⁣ to be arrested, unless they travel to a country with an extradition treaty⁢ with Russia. But ‌a Russian court could still hold a trial in absentia and hand out a prison sentence ‍of⁤ up to 10 years.

Pressure is also mounting on dissidents imprisoned in Russia. On Friday, supporters of Alexei ​Gorinov,​ a former member of​ a Moscow municipal council sentenced to​ seven years in prison for ​speaking out against ⁤the war, ⁤reported that ​his health ‍significantly deteriorated ​in‍ prison and he​ is⁤ not⁤ being given ​the ‌treatment he ⁤needs.

Gorinov was sentenced ​last year and is now serving ‌time at a penal ‌colony‌ in the…

2023-12-08 16:32:20
Article from www.theguardian.com

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