Year of the dragon
Can Chechen head Ramzan Kadyrov really be planning to legalise blood feuds in his fiefdom?

Twenty years ago, just hours after Islamist militants assassinated Chechen President Akhmad Kadyrov as he watched a Victory Day parade in Grozny, his nervous and deferential 27-year-old son Ramzan was ushered into the presence of Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin for an encounter that remains fascinating to watch two decades on.

Ask your dictator anything
Vladimir Putin once again took questions from vetted members of the Russian public during his annual call-in show on Friday

Siren songs
A Moscow academic is facing four years in prison for making a playlist of Ukrainian music

Catch and release
Some of Belarus’s most prominent opposition figures react to their surprise return to freedom

Academic rigour
How Kremlin-backed super-app MAX is gradually being made obligatory in Russian schools

Pounds of flesh
In a gross miscarriage of justice, eight innocent people have been given life sentences for the Crimean Bridge bombing

A voice from the kill zone
One Ukrainian sergeant tells Novaya Europe he is prepared to defend Donbas from Russian forces for as long as it takes

The Old Man and the Sea
How realistic are Putin’s threats to impose a naval blockade on Ukraine?
A cure for wellness
Described as torture by the UN, gay conversion therapy is nevertheless thriving in contemporary Russia

The last party
The Kremlin is taking aim at Russia’s sole remaining legal opposition movement


