Zürcher Nachrichten - Inspired by Navalny, Russian bloggers stand up to corruption

EUR -
AED 3.835815
AFN 73.243142
ALL 98.831099
AMD 413.743236
ANG 1.879125
AOA 952.430705
ARS 1074.371656
AUD 1.677928
AWG 1.879797
AZN 1.781016
BAM 1.961777
BBD 2.105214
BDT 124.599605
BGN 1.9599
BHD 0.39387
BIF 3083.193252
BMD 1.044332
BND 1.416816
BOB 7.204951
BRL 6.486037
BSD 1.042677
BTN 88.753396
BWP 14.481118
BYN 3.412196
BYR 20468.900525
BZD 2.098092
CAD 1.502736
CDF 2997.23144
CHF 0.939914
CLF 0.037545
CLP 1035.903913
CNY 7.622788
CNH 7.629234
COP 4589.837643
CRC 529.412909
CUC 1.044332
CUP 27.674789
CVE 110.60196
CZK 25.184024
DJF 185.599027
DKK 7.45964
DOP 63.5135
DZD 141.267809
EGP 53.122154
ERN 15.664975
ETB 132.757459
FJD 2.424837
FKP 0.827092
GBP 0.831554
GEL 2.934586
GGP 0.827092
GHS 15.326694
GIP 0.827092
GMD 75.192221
GNF 9011.454285
GTQ 8.031469
GYD 218.144599
HKD 8.105851
HNL 26.49171
HRK 7.490893
HTG 136.335359
HUF 411.139274
IDR 16930.75708
ILS 3.842879
IMP 0.827092
INR 89.261077
IQD 1365.861231
IRR 43953.31122
ISK 145.120672
JEP 0.827092
JMD 162.454935
JOD 0.740531
JPY 164.592904
KES 135.242969
KGS 90.856224
KHR 4190.767587
KMF 486.78912
KPW 939.89791
KRW 1539.452998
KWD 0.32178
KYD 0.868947
KZT 540.155637
LAK 22802.469975
LBP 93370.562633
LKR 307.296208
LRD 189.768147
LSL 19.387666
LTL 3.08364
LVL 0.631706
LYD 5.118594
MAD 10.514734
MDL 19.237609
MGA 4917.983121
MKD 61.698749
MMK 3391.948493
MNT 3548.638843
MOP 8.341212
MRU 41.622808
MUR 49.031321
MVR 16.061863
MWK 1808.008276
MXN 21.145502
MYR 4.669727
MZN 66.736688
NAD 19.387666
NGN 1615.581385
NIO 38.366889
NOK 11.83458
NPR 142.005634
NZD 1.851373
OMR 0.402084
PAB 1.042677
PEN 3.882629
PGK 4.231893
PHP 60.800467
PKR 290.27766
PLN 4.277491
PYG 8131.774253
QAR 3.792153
RON 4.977183
RSD 116.975308
RUB 109.290878
RWF 1454.531373
SAR 3.921794
SBD 8.755212
SCR 15.010492
SDG 628.162755
SEK 11.469132
SGD 1.418437
SHP 0.827092
SLE 23.812288
SLL 21899.115896
SOS 595.915515
SRD 36.612156
STD 21615.556853
SVC 9.123797
SYP 2623.914878
SZL 19.396092
THB 35.45523
TJS 11.406752
TMT 3.665604
TND 3.324629
TOP 2.445931
TRY 36.789115
TTD 7.085587
TWD 34.296909
TZS 2532.50452
UAH 43.718994
UGX 3816.627733
USD 1.044332
UYU 46.411397
UZS 13461.010296
VES 53.991797
VND 26583.462391
VUV 123.985146
WST 2.885267
XAF 657.961545
XAG 0.035179
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.822359
XDR 0.799436
XOF 657.961545
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.474539
ZAR 19.566713
ZMK 9400.238651
ZMW 28.855912
ZWL 336.274368
  • RIO

    0.0500

    59.25

    +0.08%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    23.66

    -0.46%

  • BTI

    0.1700

    36.43

    +0.47%

  • RBGPF

    59.8000

    59.8

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.0600

    58.92

    +0.1%

  • RELX

    -0.0300

    45.86

    -0.07%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.27

    +0.28%

  • GSK

    0.0900

    34.12

    +0.26%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    8.42

    -0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1740

    23.476

    -0.74%

  • SCS

    0.1700

    11.9

    +1.43%

  • AZN

    0.2200

    66.52

    +0.33%

  • BP

    0.0600

    28.85

    +0.21%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    122.93

    -0.21%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.2

    +0.41%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    22.87

    -0.13%

Inspired by Navalny, Russian bloggers stand up to corruption
Inspired by Navalny, Russian bloggers stand up to corruption

Inspired by Navalny, Russian bloggers stand up to corruption

Armed with only a phone and selfie stick, blogger Igor Grishin has set himself the task of fighting corruption in his hometown beyond Moscow, following in the steps of imprisoned Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny.

Text size:

Grishin, 25, has leveraged his blog to save historic buildings and local parks that would otherwise have fallen victim to developers in Koroloyov, a small but important town for Russian and Soviet space history.

But in Russia, where criticism of the authorities is quickly silenced, Grishin is already feeling the pressure from the police.

"I love Korolyov. I was born here and I want to defend what I love," says Grishin, walking through the small town just six kilometres (4 miles) outside the Russian capital.

The town of just over 200,000 people is named after Sergey Korolyov, the father of the Soviet space programme, and houses the Russian Mission Control Centre.

Strolling through the town, Grishin points out around two dozen multi-coloured buildings -- each between two and four storeys high -- that were built between 1946 and 1953.

They were once home to Soviet scientists like Sergei Kryukov, a ballistic missiles engineer, and Konstantin Bushuyev, who was involved in sending the first satellite, Sputnik, to space.

But there are plans to demolish the historic district to make way for high-rise blocks -- dull and grey -- plans that Grishin is determined fight against.

- Inspired by Navalny -

With his comrade-in-arms Roman Ivanov, the duo have been trying to speak up in a country where independent media have recently suffered a far-reaching crackdown.

After Navalny's arrest in January last year, authorities ramped up pressure on journalists, bloggers and opposition activists, with many forced to flee abroad.

Ivanov, who worked as a journalist for over 20 years, says he was fired from a state-run television channel last May after he started a YouTube channel called "Honest Korolyov".

"My boss called me to fire me because, according to him, I shouldn't bite the hand that feeds me," he says sitting in a town cafe.

He tells AFP that in today's Russia: "journalism has been replaced by propaganda".

Ivanov created his channel in 2019 after joining protests against Korolyov's former mayor, who was accused of profiting from ties to property developers.

In videos for his 5,000 subscribers, Ivanov criticises local officials pointing to electoral fraud, poor infrastructure and development plans that would destroy historic buildings.

The Korolyov mayor's office did not respond to AFP's request for comment.

Ivanov describes Navalny as a "talented organiser" and says he respects the opposition leader's investigations put together by a team that probes the wealth of Russia's elites in slick YouTube videos.

Russia on Tuesday added Navalny and a number of his allies to a list of "terrorists and extremists", as authorities further clamp down on the opposition.

"In our city practically all media are financed by the administration. What we have left is the internet and social networks," Grishin says.

- Official 'revenge' -

He is the chief editor of a blog called "Official Korolyov" hosted on Russia's popular social network VKontakte.

But even internet giants are not immune to state control.

Facebook, Twitter and TikTok have all been repeatedly fined for not deleting content at the behest of Russian authorities. Apple and Google were all forced to remove a Navalny app from their stores.

Ivanov says their publications have mobilised locals and "saved four parks which would have been torn down to make room for shopping centres".

Another victory he cited was the ousting of mayor Alexander Khodyrev last October after he was accused of falsifying election results by the independent Novaya Gazeta newspaper.

However, the bloggers' efforts have not gone unnoticed by police who came in late October to search their homes, taking away their phones and computers.

Grishin is now accused of being involved in a fight while monitoring local elections and Ivanov is facing charges of revealing pre-trial information in one of his interviews.

Ivanov thinks that authorities want to "scare activists". Grishin sees the moves as "revenge" from the ousted former mayor.

In another Moscow suburb, bloggers Alexander Dorogov and Yan Katelevsky -- who also probed corruption -- have been in detention since July 2020, on charges of blackmail.

Dorogov, who faces 15 years in prison, told AFP in court in Moscow last November their work was taken offline to protect officials.

"Our YouTube channel was deleted to hide facts we published there: bribes, corruption among funeral companies, police, investigators and prosecutors."

W.Odermatt--NZN