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Russia becomes a very chilly place for anti-war activists

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In the second month of the “special military operation” in Ukraine, Russia’s social and political atmosphere – never very receptive to dissenting opinions – is rapidly chilling. For many Russians trying to feel their way through frightening political restrictions, the dangers remain the source of deep uncertainty.

The tone has been set by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who recently seemed to refer to Russians with a pro-Western point of view as “scum and traitors” that the Russian people “will simply spit … out like an insect in their mouth.”

Why We Wrote This

The atmosphere inside Russia has turned cold to anyone critical of the country’s “special military operation” in Ukraine. But some, especially youth, are still standing up for their values.

Timur, a student in St. Petersburg, was briefly detained by police for alleged illegal protesting and let go. But he has been expelled from his university. The vice rector called Timur into his office and told him that “you are the kind of person who would stab us in the back and spit on the graves of our soldiers. … You are not wanted here.”

“We are faced with new rules. We just don’t know where the boundaries are, or what it’s going to be like tomorrow,” says Nikita, a liberal political activist. “I am just not sure what I can say. Will I be punished or not?”

Moscow

Anna Afanasyeva, a fifth-year nursing student at St. Petersburg’s Pediatric University, admits she was feeling vague anti-war emotions as she went about her business in the city center March 2. But she says she had no intention of participating in any protests.

Nevertheless, she suddenly found herself grabbed by police near the Gostiny Dvor metro station in downtown St. Petersburg, where no rally even seemed to be happening, and thrown into a police van along with several other people.

Editor’s note: This article was edited in order to conform with Russian legislation criminalizing references to Russia’s current action in Ukraine as anything other than a “special military operation.”

Why We Wrote This

The atmosphere inside Russia has turned cold to anyone critical of the country’s “special military operation” in Ukraine. But some, especially youth, are still standing up for their values.

She spent two nights in police detention before being taken to court. A sympathetic judge considered the charge of participating in an illegal assembly, noted that Ms. Afanasyeva had no previous record, and let her off with a light fine. That was just the beginning of her troubles.

“Without even waiting for the court decision, my university summarily expelled me,” she says. “There was no due process according to the rules for expelling a student. I was just told to leave. I am trying to solve this, hopefully without suing the university. If I go that way I can lose a year or more of studies. … I am just so upset about all this. I’ve heard that there is a blanket order to expel all students who participate in anti-war activities, and I just fell victim to it.”

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