Tatyana Novikova’s ultimate misstep
The story of Professor Novikova, one of the best in Russia’s Belgorod State University, who was sacked after speaking out against the war

On 18 July, Tatyana Novikova, Professor at Belgorod State University’s Pedagogical Institute, linguist, Doctor of Science and “the best scholar” in the region, was fined 30,000 rubles (€535) for “discrediting” the Russian Armed Forces. The university moved even faster to force Novikova to publicly explain herself before her colleagues and fired her for “engaging in immoral practices” ahead of the court hearing. Novikova’s students had to defend their theses without an adviser.
“I can discredit myself as a linguist, as a teacher. But I cannot discredit the army because I have nothing to do with it.
Now, she barely has any friends left in Belgorod. They started to disappear after 24 February and went completely silent when Novikova was sacked.
Afterwards, Tatyana Novikova went online to find out what an “immoral act” can be in a work context like hers. Turns out, the “immoral acts” are: theft, bribery, alcoholism or intimate relations with students.
The document that was adopted in post-Soviet Russia is named differently. But his slip of the tongue is very emblematic, seeing as Novikova’s firing is very much in line with the practices of those times.
Each representative was told to leave a signature in a special journal to prove their attendance. The only one who was not allowed to do so was Novikova.

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