Stepping up
The fearless Russian activist who turned his village store into a bastion of anti-war protest

Dmitry Skurikhin is a 49-year-old entrepreneur, activist, former municipal deputy, and father of five from the village of Russko-Vysotskoye outside St. Petersburg. He is also the first person in Russia sentenced to jail time — rather than simply fined — under recent legislation that criminalised “discrediting the Russian army”.
“I exercised my right to freedom of speech and to say things as they are,” Skurikhin said in his closing speech in court. “I am certain that my placard remains relevant. I am ready to prove everything written on it and any epithet used to describe the ‘special military operation’. And life will confirm that I am right.”
“At that time, I was able to buy everything Dmitry asked for: trousers, gloves, medicine,” she says. “I was only able to buy it because of the money I received.”
“I didn’t have that hope, but he did,” Tatyana shrugs. “He was expecting his sentence to be reviewed because the punishment he received was the harshest possible. His lawyer also said he had a chance.”









