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Support independent journalism like this! Meduza has won more Redkollegia awards than any other Russian-language media outlet. Here’s a selection of our winning reporting.

Source: Meduza

The Redkollegia is a prestigious, independent Russian media award that supports free, professional journalism. Established in 2016 by businessman and philanthropist Boris Zimin, it’s presented monthly to journalists who have published interesting and high-quality work in the Russian language. Meduza’s staff have won more than 40 Redkollegia awards in total — more than any other media outlet. However, we’re proud to say that many of these prize-winning stories were the result of collaborations with our esteemed colleagues from other publications. 

Above all, the Meduza team wants to continue producing this type of work — not for the sake of winning awards, but to provide our millions of readers in Russia and around the world with reliable independent journalism. However, great reporting costs money. And that’s why we need help from readers like you. If you live outside Russia, please consider supporting our newsroom with a monthly donation. Otherwise, Meduza as you know it may cease to exist.

The following list is a selection of Meduza’s Redkollegia-winning stories that you can read in English. You can find links to all 40+ winners in Russian here

Journalists from Meduza and Mediazona uncover a way to calculate Russia’s military losses during the first year of the full-scale war against Ukraine

Who comes up with the lies Kremlin propagandists spread? A joint investigation by journalists from Meduza, iStories, and The Bell.

The inner workings of Russia’s Institute for Internet Development — and why even anti-war dissidents turn to it for funding 

Meduza investigates what happens to Ukrainian civilians held captive in the Russian prison system

Our dispatch from Tuva, the Russian region with the highest confirmed number of soldiers killed fighting in Ukraine

The story of how a once-progressive news aggregator ruined Yandex’s reputation, caused an employee exodus, and landed its deputy CEO on sanctions lists

Meduza’s joint investigation with Astra into the atrocities Russian troops committed during the occupation of a Ukrainian village

The story of how oligarch Alexander Mamut sought to create Russia’s biggest Internet holding company — and ended up losing it all 

In which Lilia Yapparova managed to order a mass demonstration that drew a hundred men ready to brawl 

A gay Chechen man recounts how queer people are persecuted, tortured, and killed in Russia’s Chechnya 

The story of the developers behind the facial-recognition technology now used to monitor Russia’s streets 

Meduza