One man’s terrorist
Multiple Russian teenagers are facing long prison sentences for acts of sabotage carried out to make money

The parents of 10 teenagers being held in pretrial detention in the southern Russian city of Krasnodar for setting fire to railway equipment have started a campaign to get the terror charges their children are currently facing downgraded to far less serious ones for damaging property. In an increasingly rare act of public defiance, the families argue that their children had no intention of harming Russia, and had simply wanted to earn some extra money.
“I’ll kill him myself, give me 5 minutes with him.”
“They won’t tell the truth about us on TV. These are good kids! Mine is a cadet, an athlete and a patriot. But for some reason he’s now also a terrorist.”
“Children aged 14–16 are still far removed from politics. If a person has no ideology, how can they be a terrorist? This is arson for mercenary reasons.”


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Breaking the waves
The Kremlin’s latest attempt to quash Telegram echoes the Soviet Union’s war on foreign radio broadcasts

Deserting the paper army
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Censory overload
As the Kremlin declares war on queer literature, Russians are still finding ways to read and publish transgressive fiction

Violent entrapment
Queer people in Russia are increasingly being catfished by criminal gangs and even the police

A deserter’s desert
Escape routes from the Russian military are narrowing as European attitudes to ex-servicemen harden

Thawing out
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My enemy’s enemy
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Cold case
The Ukrainian Holocaust survivor who froze to death at home in Kyiv amid power cuts in the depths of winter

