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"I am an agent of peace that is banned in Russia," journalist Lyudmila Savistkaya said after the ruling on June 8. (file photo)
"I am an agent of peace that is banned in Russia," journalist Lyudmila Savistkaya said after the ruling on June 8. (file photo)

The Russian Supreme Court has rejected appeals filed by journalist Lyudmila Savitskaya and activist Darya Apakhonchich against rulings by lower courts refusing to delete their names from the country's so-called registry of foreign agents.

After the Supreme Court judge pronounced his decision on June 8, Savitskaya told RFE/RL that after, Russia launched its ongoing unprovoked invasion of Ukraine on February 24, she was "proud to be a foreign agent."

"I am different, I am not with this country that launched the war...I know now that I am an agent of peace that is banned in Russia," said Savitskaya, who is from Russia's northwestern city of Pskov.

Savitskaya and Apakhonchich, an activist from St. Petersburg who is not engaged in journalism but had posted articles from "foreign agent" media, including RFE/RL, on social networks, were among the first individuals in Russia to be included on the government's list of "media organizations fulfilling the functions of foreign agents," in December 2020.

Russian activist Darya Apakhonchich (file photo)
Russian activist Darya Apakhonchich (file photo)

They were named along with noted rights activist Lev Ponomaryov and journalists Denis Kamalyagin from Pskov and Sergei Markelov from the northwestern region of Karelia. The three of them are out of Russia now.

First passed in 2012, Russia's "foreign agent" legislation initially targeted nongovernmental organizations accused of having received foreign funding. But it has undergone numerous modifications to include foreign media organizations as well as individuals.

Human Rights Watch has criticized the legislation -- which subjects those blacklisted to restrictions, fines, and bans -- as "restrictive" and intended "to demonize independent groups."

Russian opposition activist Lyubov Sobol (file photo)
Russian opposition activist Lyubov Sobol (file photo)

A court in Moscow has changed the one-year parole-like sentence handed to opposition politician Lyubov Sobol, a close associate of jailed anti-corruption campaigner Aleksei Navalny, to real prison time saying she violated the terms of her punishment by leaving the country.

Sobol's lawyer, Vladimir Voronin, tweeted on June 8 that the Simonovsky district court approved the request made by the Federal Penitentiary Service (FSIN) to replace the parole-like sentence handed to Sobol in April 2021 for illegally forcing her way into the apartment of a Federal Security Service (FSB) officer hours after Navalny had published a recording of what he said was a phone conversation with the man.

During the 49-minute phone call, in which Navalny posed as an FSB official conducting an internal review, the officer, Konstantin Kudryavtsev, described the details of an operation to poison the Kremlin critic in August 2020.

'I Know Who Wanted To Kill Me': Millions Watch Navalny Video Naming Alleged Hit Squad
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Sobol described the court's decision as a ruling designed to silence her.

According to the court's June 8 decision, the 34-year-old Kremlin critic must serve her sentence's remaining four months in prison.

In April, the same court ruled to replace Sobol's suspended 18-month sentence with an actual prison term in a separate case where she was found guilty of publicly calling for the violation of coronavirus safety precautions.

That charge has been widely used against those who were involved in countrywide protests against the jailing of Navalny, President Vladimir Putin's most vocal critic.

Sobol's lawyer said at the time that the court ruled his client must serve her sentence's remaining five months and 26 days in prison.

Sobol, who is currently out of Russia, has yet to comment on the court’s latest ruling.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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