No country for old men
The Moscow Helsinki Group, Russia’s oldest and most well-known human rights organisation, has been shut down. For defending human rights outside of Moscow

On Wednesday, the Moscow City Court only needed one hearing to kill off Russia’s oldest human rights organisation, the Moscow Helsinki Group (MHG). The organisation’s establishment was announced in 1976 at a press conference in physicist and activist Andrey Sakharov’s apartment. Throughout its existence, the MHG was actively protecting the most vulnerable groups of people, defended people’s rights for fair justice, and opposed politically-motivated persecution. Famous human rights activist Lyudmila Alexeyeva headed the organisation from 1996 and until 2018 when she passed away. She was not afraid to tell Russian President Vladimir Putin straight to his face the most unsavoury things about the state of the country. And he listened, tolerated it, and invited her to new meetings. Putin sometimes even himself paid visits to “our oldest human rights activist”.
The reason behind the MHG liquidation was absurd, but who is surprised by absurd things happening anymore? The prosecution before the New Year instructed the Justice Ministry to conduct an “unscheduled review” of the MHG which, in turn, resulted in discovering multiple offences, including 11 violations of “territorial affiliation”. Or, in other words, the group members travelled to court hearings in other regions outside of Moscow, while the organisation is called the Moscow Helsinki Group.
Novaya Gazeta Europe coverage from the Moscow City Court
The ministry also did not like that the group participated in the “Ingush case” in 2021about mass protests in the southern region of Russia.
“The very idea that someone in Russia (individual, legal entity, public organisation, business) is banned from getting interested in a case… Just offering its assistance? I believe that this is simply some sort of legal striptease.

Miracle season
As the new year began, Russia launched its first attack of 2025 on Ukrainian cities

Still here
Russians trapped in Ukrainian-occupied Sudzha are making short videos for their families to let them know they’re alive

Recurring dream
Georgians face risk of a rigged election as the country’s ruling party seeks to hold onto power indefinitely

Cannes grenade
An array of cult figures meet in Kirill Serebrennikov’s new film about Russia’s original enfant terrible

Leaving Russian orbit
After losing Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia is struggling to make new allies as it attempts to pivot away from Russia

Abandoned by Putin
Why Belgorod residents enduring Ukrainian missile strikes feel Russia has turned its back on them

The Big Terrible Thing
The war unsurprisingly looms large in three new Ukrainian films at this year’s Berlin Film Festival

‘Barely making ends meet’
The ending of benefits for newly arrived Ukrainian refugees in the US complicates an already precarious situation for many

Ukraine marks 10th anniversary of Maidan Uprising
Looking back at the Revolution of Dignity


