Otherwise occupied
Life in Ukrainian-occupied Russia six months after Kyiv’s surprise incursion into the Kursk region

When a missile reduced a boarding school to rubble in the Ukrainian-occupied town of Sudzha in Russia’s southwestern Kursk region on 1 February, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky blamed Russia for the attack, only for the Russian Defence Ministry to accuse the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) of responsibility for the atrocity.
“There is no concentration camp or anything of the sort. The Ukrainians came and brought help with them.”
“There was no water, nothing to drink, no food supply — nothing. The Ukrainians brought everything.”
“My parents are in their 70s and they watch state TV and trust the authorities, so they’re unlikely to trust the Ukrainians.”
“There are people there who have been living in basements for six months.”


Breaking the waves
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Deserting the paper army
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Russian political prisoner dies after suffering heart attack in custody

Two Russian minors given 7-year sentences and massive fines for setting fire to military helicopter

Russia’s State Duma passes law allowing FSB to block individual communications

Russian man who declared himself a ‘foreign agent’ as a joke now faces criminal charges

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Suspect citizens
Much as in Soviet times, the Kremlin still views those with second passports as disloyal


