Russia launches criminal investigations of prominent Kremlin critics
Russian authorities have opened criminal investigations of a famous actor critical of the war in Ukraine and a philanthropist who supports the Russian opposition, the latest moves in a sweeping months-long crackdown on dissent.
Russia’s Investigative Committee said in a statement Monday that its chief, Alexander Bastrykin, had ordered the launch of a criminal case against film and theater actor Artur Smolyaninov, who left the country after Moscow’s forces invaded Ukraine last February and repeatedly spoke out against the war.
According to the statement, Smolyaninov “made a series of statements directed against Russia in an interview to a Western media outlet.” The Investigative Committee didn’t clarify which of Smolyaninov’s actions constituted a criminal offense and what charges it would bring against him.
Smolyaninov’s most recent interview last week sparked outrage among Kremlin supporters. The actor told the Novaya Gazeta Europe that if he had to fight in the war, he would fight “on the side of Ukraine.” “For me, it is on the side of my brothers who were attacked by my other brothers,” Smolyaninov said.
Officials at a school in eastern Ukraine say a Russian rocket merely blew out windows and damaged classrooms, with no troops or bloodshed anywhere.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov welcomed the action against Smolyaninov, noting that it is “important that our relevant [law enforcement] bodies think about these remarks.”
The probe comes amid increasingly harsh rhetoric about Russians who left the country because of the war. Lawmakers have suggested seizing the property of those who moved abroad, or increasing taxes for those who continue to work remotely for Russian companies. Others have simply condemned them as traitors.
Separately, Russia’s Interior Ministry placed prominent philanthropist Boris Zimin on an international most wanted list on fraud charges, officials said Monday. Zimin has funded several Russian independent media outlets as well as projects of imprisoned opposition leader Alexei Navalny.
Zimin, who reportedly left Russia in 2015, was placed on Russia’s register of people considered as “foreign agents” in September.
Navalny, the Kremlin’s fiercest foe, said that it was Zimin who paid 79,000 euros (about $85,000 at current exchange rates) for his medical evacuation to Berlin in August 2020, when the politician was poisoned with a nerve agent and lay in a coma in the Siberian city of Omsk.
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