‘You’re the only one with balls of steel’
An interview with Russian senator Lyudmila Narusova, the only lawmaker to vote against the digital summonses bill

Out of 170 members of the Russian Federation Council (the upper house of parliament), only Tuva senator Lyudmila Narusova voted against the digital summonses bill. “Let us not stretch the truth here,” she said as she spoke to fellow senators. The latter first suggested that she be deprived of the right to speak, and then offered her to “have a cup of tea”.
They may be of a completely different opinion. But law-making is organised in such a way that people are afraid to express their opinion, their beliefs, let alone to stand up for them.
Memory is not only coming to someone’s grave and shedding a tear or laying a bunch of flowers. Memory has to be of use, you must stand up for what you remember.
Unlike the former Speaker of the State Duma [Boris Gryzlov], she realises how absurd the “parliament is not a suitable place for discussion” phrase is.
For instance, I was not included in any Federation Council delegation that travels somewhere in recent years. Not even Tajikistan, not even some Russian region.
I am perplexed by the fact that the law enforcement is ready to execute such orders, and the fact that the society is also fine with it. What is that? Where did this social corrosion come from?
To twelve years in prison for cynical murder with extreme atrocity. At the same time, a person who “discredits”, or criticises the military may face twenty years behind bars.

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