Russian teachers, doctors, programmers, book critics, and actors join Orthodox priests in signing open letters against Moscow repressions

Source: Meduza

After dozens of Russian Orthodox clergy released an open letter on September 17 criticizing the prosecution of Moscow election protesters, members of several other professions have also gathered together to demand that defendants in the so-called “Moscow case” be released or acquitted.

By the end of the day on September 18, 1,868 Russian schoolteachers had signed a letter saying the Russian government had learned nothing from its history and would have been “held back a grade” under their watch. More than 100 doctors signed a different manifesto saying they could sense the country’s escalating political anxiety through their patients. Over 150 programmers signed yet another petition on Github. For Russia’s theater professionals, the repressions hit particularly close to home thanks to the now-infamous sentencing of actor Pavel Ustinov; they collected signatures for a letter to Vladimir Putin himself. More than 30 publishing and bookselling professionals, including Meduza’s own resident film and literature critics, also jumped into the mix.

stories

‘Partisans should work with whoever they want’ Wealthy Russians have a history of funding the anti-Putin opposition. Here’s how they do it — and what’s in it for them.

stories

‘A blueprint for building Putinism’ Kremlin official Alexander Kharichev pens new policy essay hailing Russians’ self-sacrifice and reverence for state authority

news

Imagined common enemies Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service dreams of an alliance with Washington against ‘Eurofascism’

stories

'I've done my job no worse than other deputies' This Russian municipal lawmaker has been working remotely for four years — from Dnipro, Ukraine

news

Russia has arrested the Kursk region's ex-governor. He oversaw the construction of anti-tank barriers — which later crumbled from rain and snow.

stories

‘The platform where bot farms are still effective’ How Russia is leveraging TikTok's algorithm to try to warp public opinion in Ukraine

stories

My house is your house A new investigation suggests that Moscow’s political and economic favors fuel Serbia’s fast-tracked citizenship for well-connected Russians

stories

School discos, cafe vouchers, and car lotteries How to solve a population crisis, according to Russian officials

news

'I have always acted within the law' Who are the four Russian journalists jailed for their alleged work with Navalny's organization?

explainers

Moscow's spring offensive begins Russian forces launch their first major operation since the battle for Sudzha with a thrust toward Kostiantynivka

stories

‘Sweden’s security service has gone a little crazy’ Stockholm is treating exiled Russian scientists like security threats — and banning them from the Schengen zone

stories

Why the Kremlin still fears the legacy of Soviet eco-warriors

stories

'It’s all about raw, exaggerated emotion' How Russia's propaganda shows went from demonizing America to praising Trump without blinking

news

‘No’: Meduza’s new art exhibition in Berlin A tribute to those who have the courage to resist

news

'Once again, Russia has brought death' Photos of the aftermath of Moscow's deadly Palm Sunday missile strike on central Sumy

meduza

Help us support Ukrainians affected by Russia’s war A new fundraising campaign from Helpdesk, TV Rain, and Meduza

meduza

New Meduza merch hits the shelves

meduza

Investigations, long reads, and open-data analysis A selection of Meduza’s best English-language reporting

The Beet

stories

Farewell to the Rohat Tajikistan’s most iconic teahouse falls victim to the capital’s redevelopment craze

stories

Radical crossroads Revolutionary Ireland and the fight against the Russian Empire

news

‘They tell us to work, but we already do’ Refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh face uncertain future as Armenia cuts back aid

stories

Dispatch from Perloja How the shattering of empires after WWI turned one tiny Lithuanian village into a ‘republic’

stories

Vanishing ice, rising risks As Central Asia’s glaciers disappear, a new generation of scientists works to track them

This is Meduza

stories

The million-dollar reporter How attackers hijacked the phone of Meduza co-founder Galina Timchenko, making her the first Russian journalist to be infected with Pegasus spyware

stories

For 10 years, we’ve fought censorship to bring you the truth about Russia To celebrate this milestone, we’re sharing 20 things you probably didn’t know about Meduza

Cyberattackers target Meduza with unprecedented DDoS campaign in effort to disable site

stories

‘So what’d you write?’ Ivan Golunov tells ‘Meduza’ about life as an investigative journalist in Russia today and being framed for drug dealing

stories

‘I want to live — and that’s why I’m writing’ Russian journalist Elena Kostyuchenko recounts surviving an apparent poisoning attempt in Germany

meduza

Meduza is granting open access to all coverage of the war in Ukraine under a Creative Commons license You can reprint our articles about the conflict in full — anywhere you like

meduza

Наші серця — з Україною An appeal from Meduzaʼs newsroom to Ukrainian readers

explainers

Life after ‘undesirability’ Now that Meduza has been outlawed, these are the risks involved in reading and sharing our work from inside Russia

12 карточек