The night watch
How a Nemtsov Bridge volunteer ended up being sent to prison for 12 years on terror charges

Even when he wasn’t on duty there himself, Yevgeny Mishchenko would sometimes visit the central Moscow bridge where Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov was assassinated in 2015, often stopping by after work to check in with his fellow volunteers to see if they needed help with anything.
“For Yevgeny, keeping watch over the bridge was like a religious service.”
Pretending to share Mishchenko’s passionate belief in democracy and human rights, Karasyov had regularly come to the bridge during Mishchenko’s shifts where he would initiate political discussions, which he secretly recorded.
“We know that people went to protests, opposed and disagreed with the existing government, and as the Gospel tells us: every kingdom divided against itself will be laid waste, and no city or house divided against itself will stand.”


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