Crackdown on dissent at new low: who is Putin critic Darya Serenko in Moscow’s most wanted list?

Updated : Apr 11, 2024 06:55
|
Editorji News Desk

Russian authorities have put more Kremlin critics on a wanted list as its crackdown against dissent reaches unprecedented levels since Moscow sent troops into Ukraine more than two years ago.

Independent Russian news outlet Mediazona reported Tuesday that it found women's rights activist Darya Serenko and prominent journalist and author Mikhail Zygar in the Interior Ministry's database of individuals wanted on criminal charges. The entries don't specify the charges or when they were added to the list.

Both Serenko and Zygar have long left Russia.

The Kremlin's crackdown against opposition activists, independent journalists and government critics has intensified during the war. Hundreds have faced criminal charges over protests and remarks condemning the war in Ukraine, and thousands have been fined or briefly jailed.

Serenko, a longtime activist and author, co-founded the Feminist Anti-War Resistance group shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022 and moved to Georgia during the crackdown. Both she and the group were designated as “foreign agents", a label that comes with additional government scrutiny.

Zygar, an author and a founding editor in chief of Russia's independent TV channel Dozhd, also left Russia after the invasion and was declared a “foreign agent”. Unconfirmed Russian media reports earlier this year said Zygar could be facing charges of spreading false information about the army over a social media post about Russian atrocities in Bucha, a suburb near Kyiv occupied for several weeks by Moscow's forces.

Spreading false information about the army is a criminal offense punishable by up to 15 years in prison under a law Moscow adopted days after announcing what the Kremlin insists on calling a “special military operation” in Ukraine.

The law has been widely used against those who publicly criticise the war or the Kremlin, including those who left Russia. Many have been tried and convicted in absentia.

Vladimir Putin

Recommended For You

editorji | World

NASA astronauts Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore face extended stay on ISS

editorji | World

'Satellite beams turned off over India': Musk rejects claim of Starlink misuse in Manipur

editorji | World

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill at least 12 Palestinians

editorji | World

Muhammad Yunus celebrates end of Sheikh Hasina’s ‘autocratic government’

editorji | World

Pope makes 1st papal visit to France’s Corsica awash in expressions of popular piety