The Japan Times - Inspired by Navalny, Russian bloggers stand up to corruption

EUR -
AED 4.190162
AFN 82.135427
ALL 99.363241
AMD 444.283963
ANG 2.055997
AOA 1046.652663
ARS 1343.832124
AUD 1.77551
AWG 2.056237
AZN 1.932993
BAM 1.966166
BBD 2.303947
BDT 138.639709
BGN 1.953904
BHD 0.429896
BIF 3345.876246
BMD 1.140769
BND 1.499278
BOB 7.901484
BRL 6.450363
BSD 1.141116
BTN 96.978582
BWP 15.642193
BYN 3.734222
BYR 22359.07754
BZD 2.292054
CAD 1.578077
CDF 3284.275012
CHF 0.937102
CLF 0.028062
CLP 1076.874961
CNY 8.321893
CNH 8.311753
COP 4810.623979
CRC 576.941701
CUC 1.140769
CUP 30.230385
CVE 110.5978
CZK 24.954899
DJF 202.737766
DKK 7.465457
DOP 67.305622
DZD 151.027578
EGP 58.001728
ERN 17.111539
ETB 149.550648
FJD 2.603406
FKP 0.856819
GBP 0.849411
GEL 3.125667
GGP 0.856819
GHS 17.465125
GIP 0.856819
GMD 80.994465
GNF 9873.357999
GTQ 8.788333
GYD 238.722293
HKD 8.848548
HNL 29.431933
HRK 7.534098
HTG 149.307164
HUF 404.328564
IDR 19166.691798
ILS 4.127418
IMP 0.856819
INR 97.14888
IQD 1494.978118
IRR 48040.649287
ISK 146.007378
JEP 0.856819
JMD 180.76141
JOD 0.808919
JPY 162.244805
KES 147.731395
KGS 99.760127
KHR 4566.499656
KMF 493.386381
KPW 1026.692336
KRW 1641.042437
KWD 0.349749
KYD 0.950997
KZT 585.190057
LAK 24683.369827
LBP 102212.926182
LKR 341.751753
LRD 227.64099
LSL 21.30462
LTL 3.368395
LVL 0.690039
LYD 6.242858
MAD 10.580087
MDL 19.54671
MGA 5147.719945
MKD 61.553306
MMK 2395.477676
MNT 4073.570578
MOP 9.116222
MRU 45.162707
MUR 51.619833
MVR 17.579546
MWK 1978.19458
MXN 22.352576
MYR 4.971243
MZN 73.008614
NAD 21.30462
NGN 1831.185579
NIO 41.991383
NOK 11.806653
NPR 155.166012
NZD 1.912066
OMR 0.439206
PAB 1.141091
PEN 4.182345
PGK 4.623565
PHP 64.362474
PKR 320.673116
PLN 4.267794
PYG 9137.172187
QAR 4.159191
RON 4.977976
RSD 117.831219
RUB 94.291218
RWF 1609.643891
SAR 4.279173
SBD 9.530343
SCR 16.496695
SDG 685.034147
SEK 10.947847
SGD 1.4939
SHP 0.896466
SLE 25.899685
SLL 23921.342521
SOS 651.952421
SRD 42.037662
STD 23611.620524
SVC 9.984552
SYP 14832.197421
SZL 21.121387
THB 38.078835
TJS 12.038155
TMT 3.992692
TND 3.402351
TOP 2.671797
TRY 43.857991
TTD 7.744695
TWD 37.014078
TZS 3068.668932
UAH 47.569776
UGX 4185.064123
USD 1.140769
UYU 48.042866
UZS 14772.962132
VES 98.730054
VND 29660.000818
VUV 137.556436
WST 3.153067
XAF 659.419079
XAG 0.034467
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.082986
XDR 0.818879
XOF 656.505185
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.605762
ZAR 21.122997
ZMK 10268.29402
ZMW 31.864294
ZWL 367.327237
  • RBGPF

    60.8800

    60.88

    +100%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.8

    +0.47%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    9.86

    -0.3%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    22.48

    +0.09%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    53.36

    -0.36%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.32

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    0.8100

    72.85

    +1.11%

  • BCC

    -0.1800

    95.33

    -0.19%

  • RIO

    0.3100

    60.87

    +0.51%

  • GSK

    0.6300

    38.06

    +1.66%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    10.12

    -0.59%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    21.81

    +0.73%

  • VOD

    0.2200

    9.57

    +2.3%

  • AZN

    0.3600

    69.93

    +0.51%

  • BTI

    0.3400

    42.39

    +0.8%

  • BP

    -0.0600

    29.13

    -0.21%

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."

Y.Kimura--JT