War and fleece
Amid the fog of war, the Kremlin is further redistributing Russia’s wealth among Putin’s inner circle

A wave of expropriations is gaining momentum in Russia as the state continues to consolidate its control of the defence industry while also seizing the assets of “unpatriotic” business people living abroad. Novaya Gazeta Europe and Transparency International Russia have investigated the nationalisation of some 180 private companies in the two years since the start of the war in an attempt to understand what this major redistribution of wealth within Russia’s elites could mean.
Since the start of the war in Ukraine, the Russian state has expropriated or launched bids to expropriate companies with assets of over 1 trillion rubles (€10.1 billion), the equivalent to 0.6% of Russia’s GDP.
Prosecutors are focusing on business people who have left the country, with about half the owners of seized companies now living outside Russia.
“Companies from Turkey, India, China and the UAE won’t buy anything without guarantees from the Russian authorities,” Shumanov said.
“Nationalising these companies sends a signal to others that they should return to Russia. Some business owners are already making public statements that they plan to,”


Remorseless
The killer of Novaya Gazeta’s Anastasia Baburova has been freed into a country that’s more aligned with her worldview than ever

Moscow’s minions
A new pro-Kremlin bloc is taking shape in the European Parliament
Double whammy
Could sanctions and drone strikes lead to the collapse of Russian oil production and end its funding of the Kremlin’s war machine?
Dream ticket
As Georgia’s slide into autocracy continues, Europe appears to be losing faith it can reverse the process
They came from the East
Europe is struggling to respond to Russia’s growing use of hybrid warfare
Profits of doom
Will the EU breach its own sanctions to compensate an Austrian bank fined €2 billion in Russia?
Economic overkill
Russia’s untenable level of military spending has trapped the country in a Catch-22
Tanking it
Ukrainian drone strikes have disabled one sixth of Russia’s oil refining capacity and led to a protracted fuel crisis
Stopping the clock
Why has Russia massively increased its funding of anti-ageing research?



