Shebekino residents say authorities are charging 3,000 rubles to evacuate children

Source: Meduza

Residents of the Shebekino district, in Russia’s Belgorod, region have been complaining on local social media channels that local authorities have charged them 3,000 rubles (around $37) per child to evacuate children from cities on the border with Ukraine.

“Thank God I sent my kids to a camp in the Voronezh region yesterday. What it took to get on that list! They promised it would be free, and then at the last minute they said I needed to pay for transportation. So I had to pay 6,000 rubles (around $75) for both of them,” one resident reportedly said.

Telegram channel Mozhem Obyasnit (We’ll Explain) reports that two local residents confirmed the charges. The channel was able to verify the residents’ identities.

A similar message appeared on Russian social networking site VKontakte, when a Shebekinsky resident asked district head Vladimir Zhdanov why children were being sent to the Voronezh region on their parents’ dime. Zhdanov answered that “the decision was made so that children wouldn’t have to travel long distances on school buses.”

Mozhem Obyasnit reports that during a later conversation with journalists, Zhdanov denied that authorities were charging parents money. He did not explain his previous VKontakte comment.

The Belgorod region has experienced shelling every day since late May, causing regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov to order the evacuation of children from the Shebekinsky district to other regions further from the front lines.

news

Russian police are raiding gyms, sweeping up men for conscription and deportation

stories

The ruble has been surging since Trump returned to office. That could be bad news for Russia’s state budget.

stories

‘The real cause is human’ One year after a devastating flood, residents of Russia’s Orsk are still living with the consequences

stories

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

news

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

stories

‘The pressure still isn’t enough’ A Russian missile attack on Kyiv killed one and injured three on Sunday. Zelensky called it ‘Putin’s response’ to international diplomacy. 

stories

The Kremlin’s new ultra-nationalists Extremism expert Alexander Verkhovksy explains how far-right groups bolster Russia’s anti-migrant campaign and recruit war veterans into their ranks

stories

‘Go back to the kitchen’ Journalists at Glasnaya Media ask why so many Russian gamers hate women

stories

‘Preemptive intimidation’ A Russian pensioner spent nearly three years in prison after protesting the war. She returned to a home damaged by arsonists.

news

The criminal case taking shape against opposition politician Leonid Volkov’s father

stories

Russia is offering mortgages in a Ukrainian city it doesn’t control — and keeps bombing

stories

Surveilling Putin’s ‘shadow fleet’ Meduza’s dispatch from the Baltic Sea, where a new NATO mission aims to protect undersea infrastructure as tensions rise with Russia

guest essays

The inconvenient truth about Europe’s frozen Russian assets Millions of private investors have become collateral damage in Western sanctions against Moscow. Zhanna Nemtsova says the E.U. should do something about it.

news

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

stories

‘My dearest Mommy, I will miss you so much’ Victims of Russian strike on Kryvyi Rih include two women remembered for their devotion to community

stories

The man behind the burning Kremlin Zelensky’s most talked-about painting was created by an artist from Georgia

stories

‘I couldn’t keep hiding’ Russian-born tennis star Daria Kasatkina came out as gay and denounced the war. Now she’s joining Team Australia — and being branded a ‘traitor.’

stories

‘He had no understanding of what war is’ How the Russian authorities forced a man with an intellectual disability into the army, where he faced threats and abuse

news

‘Astro-planetary karate’ loses again Argentina arrests notorious Russian cult leader after hospital scandal alerts police

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

Radical crossroads Revolutionary Ireland and the fight against the Russian Empire

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

stories

Dispatch from Pankisi Valley In the aftermath of a controversial election, frustration and fear on Georgia’s rural fringe

stories

Dispatch from Belgrade Nearly three years after fleeing wartime Russia, Serbia’s Russian émigrés tentatively put down roots

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