Siren songs
A Moscow academic is facing four years in prison for making a playlist of Ukrainian music

“If someone had told me in the late 80s or early 90s that there would be political prisoners in Russia again, and that they would get longer sentences for online comments than for committing murder, I would have told you you were mad,” says Alexander Nesterenko, a Russian academic currently in custody for including Ukrainian songs on an online playlist.
The basis for the charge against him was a playlist he had made on popular Russian social media platform VK, which included several Ukrainian songs.
“The fact that students inform on their teachers was not a surprise after 20 years of working at the university,” Nesterenko wrote from prison. “That happened regularly, but when the war started, the accusations became political.”
In his closing statement to the court, Nesterenko said that if he was guilty of anything, then it was not having been among those who were the first to be imprisoned by the Russian authorities for their beliefs.
“Silence and inaction meant accepting what was happening. But my conscience and ideals meant I couldn’t go along with it.”









