Occupational hazard
How popular resistance in occupied Kherson was crushed and a well-known local journalist was jailed for espionage

Thousands of civilians from occupied parts of Ukraine are currently languishing in Russian prisons. One of those grabbed off the street in his home town in southern Ukraine’s Kherson region was Serhiy Tsyhipa, a well-known 63-year-old journalist, writer and public figure from the town of Nova Kakhovka. Tall, charming, and always stylish, almost everyone in the town knew him. He was elected to the local council three times and even after he left politics, people continued to come to him with their problems.
When asked where Serhiy was, he replied, “You know as well as I do”.


My enemy’s enemy
How Ukrainians and Russia’s ethnic minority groups are making common cause in opposing Russian imperialism

Cold case
The Ukrainian Holocaust survivor who froze to death at home in Kyiv amid power cuts in the depths of winter

Cold war
Kyiv residents are enduring days without power as Russian attacks and freezing winter temperatures put their lives at risk

Scraping the barrel
The Kremlin is facing a massive budget deficit due to the low cost of Russian crude oil

Beyond the Urals
How the authorities in Chelyabinsk are floundering as the war in Ukraine draws ever closer

Family feud
Could Anna Stepanova’s anti-war activism see her property in Russia be confiscated and handed to her pro-Putin cousin?
Cries for help
How a Kazakh psychologist inadvertently launched a new social model built on women supporting women

Deliverance
How one Ukrainian soldier is finally free after spending six-and-a-half years as a Russian prisoner of war

Watch your steppe
Five new films worth searching out from Russia’s regions and republics




