Holiday from reason
While the Kremlin still doesn’t have full control of the four Ukrainian regions it claims to have absorbed, it has made the anniversary of their 'return' to Russia a new holiday

To mark the first anniversary of it swallowing up four partially occupied regions of eastern Ukraine last year, Russia has made 30 September “Reunification Day”, an impressive feat of counterfactual propaganda given that it is not even fully in control of the territories it now claims as its own.
When the Moscow-installed governors of the Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions signed treaties with Russian President Vladimir Putin formalising their accession to the Russian Federation on 30 September last year, the international community condemned both the violation of international law it represented and the sham referendums that had been used to justify it.
And yet, the howl of international criticism wasn’t even the biggest factor undermining Russia’s outrageous land grab. Rather more significant was the fact that it didn’t even fully control the regions, a situation that has only worsened since the treaties were signed, as Russian forces continue to lose territory.
On 9 November, Stremousov was killed in what was officially deemed a car crash. On the same day, the Russian Defence Ministry issued the order for Russian forces to abandon Kherson and retreat to the left bank of the river.
Separatist forces seized the municipal administration once again; but troops deployed by Ukraine’s Interior Ministry successfully regained control of the building without a shot being fired the following day, arresting 74 people, and the day-old “Kharkiv People’s Republic” ceased to be.

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


