Holding on to the light
Ukrainian documentary maker and former combatant Alisa Kovalenko discusses her new film
Born in southeastern Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region in 1987, Alisa Kovalenko studied documentary filmmaking in Kyiv and Poland and released her debut short in 2014, coinciding with Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea and the beginning of its proxy war in Donbas.
“I wrote those letters with the future in mind. If I didn’t make it back and he grew up full of questions, who would answer them?”
“If we’d waited for the ‘right’ moment, the film would never have been finished.”
“All of us have grown up. But I wish we could have done it without losing that sense of being truly alive.”

The price of freedom
Director Alexander Molochnikov talks about Extremist, his short film about former political prisoner Sasha Skochilenko
The deep freeze
Activist Zhanna Nemtsova on why depriving small-time Russian investors of their assets in the West won’t help undermine Putin
The B team
A veteran diplomat explains how the upcoming Trump-Putin summit is amateurish and politically driven

Charity begins at home
Exiled Russian activist Grigory Sverdlin discusses how the war in Ukraine is reshaping Russia’s charity sector

Fighting on
Exiled Russian Indigenous rights activist on defending marginalised communities and resisting propaganda

Rowing it alone
How Southampton-based anaesthesiologist Leonid Krivsky rowed across the Atlantic, collected £50,000 for Ukraine and found himself along the way

Not naming names
Ilya Politkovsky on Words of War, the first feature film about his mother, Anna Politkovskaya

Heart of darkness
Veteran human rights activist Oleg Orlov on his recent mission to Ukraine to document Russian war crimes

Illegal profession
What does the imprisonment of Navalny’s lawyers mean for Russia’s criminal justice system?


