Just a chat in the kitchen
One of Russia’s oldest human rights advocates faces trial in the Far East for a private conversation about political change
Pavel KuznetsovMay 18, 10:56

In a modest flat on Sakhalin, an island on Russia’s remote Pacific frontier, a frail man in a wheelchair once gathered with friends to discuss the future of their country. What unfolded there — a private conversation between long-time acquaintances — might, in another time or place, have been little more than a footnote in their lives. But in Vladimir Putin’s Russia, where speech is increasingly criminalised and dissent viewed as sabotage, it has become the basis for a criminal prosecution.
Of the seven recipients of the article, four testified that they had never even read it.
“I’ve seen how hard it is for him to even get out of bed. But he keeps going.”
More on the topic

No peace without human rights
A statement by Russian human rights defenders on why humanitarian considerations should take centre stage in any deal
Topics
More by this author
Bunker mentality How one Ukrainian civilian plans to ride out nuclear apocalypseBehind closed doors A recent retirement home abuse scandal has laid bare the crisis in Russia’s eldercare sector‘I had no hope of getting out’ One Yakut anti-war punk musician’s long journey to freedom in BerlinMore stories

Alexey Navalny’s mother has compensation claim for his death in prison thrown out
Police officer killed in apparent suicide bombing at Moscow station
Russia opens criminal investigation into Telegram founder Pavel Durov for ‘facilitating terrorist activity’

Former Nadezhdin campaign manager had Russian citizenship rescinded after attending Navalny’s funeral

St. Petersburg State University offers students €550 signing bonus for enlisting in military

Russian journalist uncovers Putin’s secret stake in Kremlin-backed super app MAX

Russia to block Telegram from 1 April as crackdown on foreign-owned apps continues

Top Chechen court orders retrial of jailed mother of anti-Kadyrov activists

Poison from Ecuadorian tree frog used to kill Alexey Navalny, European lab tests show
News
US to let India buy millions of barrels of Russian oil from vessels stranded by Iran warMarch 6, 16:21
Hungary seizes €70 million in cash from Ukrainian bank staff as rift with Kyiv worsensMarch 6, 14:38
Russia and Ukraine release 500 POWs each in largest prisoner exchange since MayMarch 6, 12:28
Russia ramps up social media crusade in favour of spyware-loaded ‘super app’March 6, 11:07
Readers' choice
Most popular articles from the last two weeks

Subjects
Influencer operation
A cohort of pro-Kremlin content creators is shamelessly portraying the Russian occupation of Mariupol in a positive light
Yulia Akhmedova
December 1, 16:13
Subjects
NATO’s next test
The alliance must face down the Russian threat in places where deterrence is most fragile, such as the Suwałki corridor
Agnia Grigas
February 19, 10:40
Articles
New Russia, old problems
How a reclaimed imperial term came to represent something far more than a mere territorial claim for Russian soldiers
Maria Kurbak
March 5, 12:36