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Media inside Russia includes television and radio channels, periodicals, and Internet media, which according to the laws of the Russian Federation may be either state or private property. As of 2023 [update] , Russia ranked 164 out of 180 countries in the Press Freedom Index compiled by Reporters Without Borders . [ 2 ]
A Russian propaganda rally in Sevastopol, April 2022, portraying the Russian invasion of Ukraine as a defence of the Donbas. The slogan reads: "For the President! For Russia! For Donbas!" As part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Russian state and state-controlled media have spread disinformation in their information war against Ukraine. [1]
Another Ukrainian citizen, Serhiy Litvinov, is also held in Russia and his forced statements were used by Russian media as 'proof' of 'genocide of Russian nationals' as Litvinov was also charged with murdering twenty 'unidentified people' and a rape. By the end of 2014, most of the charges against him were dropped, leaving one robbery charge. [104]
The Kremlin's hold on Russian media coverage appears to be slipping, ... Now news outlets are essentially forced to sell a war many of them did not expect, Weiss told Yahoo News, against a ...
Commentators on Russian state television have been forced to go off script by Ukrainian forces' swift advance in the country's Kharkiv region and Moscow's rapid retreat. Since the beginning of ...
"The publishing house is forced to withhold the text in order to avoid accusations of violating Russian law.” Russian publisher reportedly forced to remove information about trans people from ...
In April–July 2022, the Russian authorities put several Wikipedia articles on their list of forbidden sites, [106] [107] [108] and then ordered search engines to mark Wikipedia as a violator of Russian laws. [109] Russian authorities have blocked or removed about 138,000 websites since Russia began its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. [110]
LONDON (Reuters) -In years past, the staff of the Moscow weekly Sobesednik would throw a party each February to toast the newspaper's anniversary. In another sat a colonel from a shadowy branch of ...