Too smart for their own good
Russia is waging a war against its own scientists: special services are searching for traitors among prominent and elderly physicists. Not all of them live to hear the verdict

This is Anatoly Maslov, an experimental physicist. He celebrated his 76th birthday in a Moscow pre-trial jail. Now he is in a St. Petersburg detention centre waiting for the trial. He can be sentenced to up to 20 years.
This is Valery Mitko, Arctic researcher and hydroacoustics specialist. He had spent two years under house arrest before dying of a heart attack and not living to hear his verdict — which was also likely to be 20 years behind bars.
This is Alexey Vorobyov, a specialist in rocket engines. He is only 46 but has already received his 20-year sentence. This is Viktor Kudryavtsev, a leading specialist at the research facility of Russia’s space agency Roscosmos. He is no longer with us. He was the oldest prisoner of Moscow’s Lefortovo jail. After a year and a half there, he was diagnosed with terminal cancer. The investigators let him go on his recognisance so he could live out the last days of his life at home, where he died. The man never admitted guilt.
This is Dmitry Kolker, a one-of-a-kind specialist in quantum optics. He is gone now, too. After his arrest, he spent several hours in jail and died at the nearest hospital. He had stage 4 cancer and could not eat by himself. But the court ruled that he was fit enough go to jail.
This is Valery Golubkin. He is not doing too well either. Recently, he celebrated his 70th birthday in jail, where he has been for the last two years, waiting for his verdict.
Many of them were department heads and research advisors, got published in scientific journals, held seminars and lectures abroad, made scientific discoveries, and got prizes and awards before their arrest. They all are different. Loyal to the system and not so loyal, old and young, liberal and conservative. But they all have one thing in common in today’s Russia: they are scientists who have been accused of treason. And the main beneficiary of their imprisonment is the Federal Security Service (FSB), which deprives them not only of their freedom and ability to work, but sometimes of their lives.
There were reports of another arrest of a Russian scientist last week. He is an elderly aerodynamics scientist from Novosibirsk, Valery Zvegintsev. In the past year, three more of his colleagues have been arrested in the region. Novaya-Europe has collected what is known about them and other Russian scientists arrested in the last five years.
The institute’s staff reported the arrest of their third scientist in a year — Valery Zvegintsev, the founder of the Laboratory of Large Velocity Aero-Gas Dynamics, who is well over 70.
It is where the criminal case against him will be heard — behind closed doors, which is par for the course in high treason cases.
MAI management hastily dismissed Vorobyov and his wife, an MAI lecturer, although no charges were brought against her. The woman was left unemployed with a three-year-old child in her care.
Yet, the investigator ignored both this fact and the fact that before the reports were sent, two committees confirmed that there was no confidential information in the reports.

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