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Pussy Riot member designated as ‘foreign agent’ by Russian authorities
30 December 2021, 21:04
Nadezhda Tolokonnikova was among several people handed the label as part of efforts to stifle dissent.
Russian authorities have designated a member of the Pussy Riot punk group, a satirist and an art collector as “foreign agents” as part of efforts to stifle dissent.
The Justice Ministry applied the label to Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, a Pussy Riot member who became widely known for taking part in a 2012 protest inside Moscow’s Christ the Saviour Cathedral, after which she spent nearly two years in prison.
Journalist and satirist Viktor Shenderovich and art collector Marat Gelman were also handed the label along with several other people.
The “foreign agent” label implies additional government scrutiny and carries strong pejorative connotations that can discredit recipients.
Russian authorities have applied the designation to scores of media outlets, civil society groups and individuals, ratcheting up pressure on those who are critical of the Kremlin.
Those designated as “foreign agents” are required to add a lengthy statement to news reports, social media posts and other materials specifying that the content was created by a “foreign agent”.
Earlier this week, a Russian court shut the country’s oldest and most prominent human rights group, Memorial, citing its failure to identify itself as a “foreign agent”.
Ms Tolokonnikova tweeted that she would not abide by the requirement to mark her posts with the “foreign agent” designation. She said she would challenge the authorities’ decision in court, concluding: “Russia will be free.”