Censorship of anti-war protest in Russia


Overview

People in Russia are not able to protest peacefully without fear of reprisals.

A week into its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Russia introduced war censorship laws to make criticism the invasion a grave offence.

Many people are serving lengthy prison sentences for peaceful anti-war dissent. That includes people like Natalya Filonova, who has been sentenced to almost three years in prison after an anti-war protest. Or Maria Ponomarenko, who is serving a six-year sentence for a Telegram post.

These censorship laws violate human rights and should be repealed.

Russia’s war censorship laws must go

Act in solidarity with people in Russia who dare to protest its war against Ukraine.

War censorship laws in Russia

Russia’s war censorship laws, introduced in March 2022, banned people from criticising Russia’s aggression in Ukraine. They branded calls against war crimes by Russian forces as “fakes” or “discrediations” of the Russian Armed Forces. Under the new censorship laws, these actions can be met with a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.

The laws led to an exodus of independent media and activists from Russia and a crackdown on any form of anti-war dissent. Even calling the war “a war” instead of a “special military operation” is considered a crime.

People in Russia continue to protest against the war in Ukraine. However, the Russian authorities are determined to shut them down completely. In 2023 the number and length of prison sentences for anti-war posts on social media increased. In 2024, a new law was introduced to allow confiscation of the property of people who were charged under the war censorship laws.

Russia must repeal these repressive laws and immediately release all those imprisoned for raising their voices against the war of aggression. Help us protect the protest.

Two heavily armored police officers force down a protester.
Police detain a protestor during a demonstration against the Russian military operation in Ukraine.

Send a message of solidarity to imprisoned protesters in Russia

Aleksei Gorinov

Aleksei Gorinov stares straight down the lens.

Aleksei Gorinov is a local opposition politician in Moscow. He publicly criticized the war of aggression and was the first person to be sentenced under the new legislation for distributing “false” information about the Russian Army.

Maria Ponomarenko

Portrait of Russian journalist and anti-war activist Maria Ponomarenko behind bars.

Maria Ponomarenko has been imprisoned for sharing information about the deadly Mariupol theatre attack. Authorities claimed it was “false”. Her ill-treatment in detention has led to the deterioration of her mental health.

Vladimir Rumyantsev

Portrait of Vladimir Rumyantsev looking to one side.

Vladimir Rumyantsev built a portable radio station to transmit uncensored news about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Russian authorities tracked the source of the radio signal and he was sentenced to three years in prison.

Dmitry Skurikhin

Dmitry Skurikhin stands in front of his shop, painted with anti-war messages.

Dmitry Skurikhin painted the front of his village shop in north-west Russia with anti-war messages and continued to protest after being fined. Amnesty supporters from more than twenty countries sent messages of support to Dmitry. On 26th July 2024, he was released from the penal colony, after having served an 18 month sentence for anti-war protest.

Natalya Filonova

Natalia Filonova stands in a crowd of people

Natalya Filonova is an activist and journalist. She was detained during a peaceful anti-war protest in September 2022 and later sentenced to almost three years in prison for allegedly scratching two police officers with a pen.

Aleksandra Skochilenko

Aleksandra Skochilenko makes a peace sign at the camera.

Aleksandra Skochilenko replaced price tags in a local supermarket with small anti-war labels. Almost 200,000 Amnesty supporters around the world showed their solidarity for Aleksandra. On 1st August 2024, she was released from prison as part of a prisoner swap. She served nine months of her seven-year sentence.

Russia’s war censorship laws must go

Act in solidarity with people in Russia who dare to protest its war against Ukraine.

Other forms of reprisals

In 2024, people in Russia are not able to protest peacefully without fear of reprisals. 

This didn’t happen overnight. Most legislative amendments used to curtail the right to the freedom of peaceful assembly in Russia were introduced after Russia illegally annexed Ukraine’s Crimea in 2014. Later, the Covid-19 pandemic was used as a pretext to enforce a ban on assemblies in major cities across Russia that is still in place today.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drastically reshaped the civic space for protest in Russia. Over 20,000 individuals have been subjected to severe reprisals for their anti-war positions. Protesters continue to face reprisals even in custody – some are denied healthcare they require or are subjected to forced psychiatric treatment, placed in isolation, or receive new arbitrary charges. There are cases of anti-war protesters being deprived of, or threatened with, the removal of their parental rights.

The Russian government’s crackdown on freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression aims to eliminate peaceful protest. Those who defend these rights have been facing reprisals too. Journalists and independent monitors have been silenced in order to prevent reporting of protests.

Amnesty International works to protect the protest in Russia and globally.

Russian journalist Roman Ivanov was sentenced to seven years in prison for sharing reports on the killing of civilians in Bucha and other alleged crimes committed by the Russian military.

Children and the crackdown on protest in Russia

Children are being punished in Russia for anti-war dissent.

They are becoming victims of political persecution for their own anti-war views, and those of their parents. Their right to freedom of expression is being trampled, a blatant disregard of the international obligations of Russia. Instead of being a place for the free exchange of opinions, schools are a platform for indoctrination and suppression of dissent. Families are forcibly separated as an instrument for the repression of both adults and children.

12-year-old Maria Moskalyova from the town of Yefremov in Tula region was separated from her father and placed in an orphanage after her father was arrested for his social media posts condemning the actions of the Russian army in Ukraine. The son of activist Natalya Filonova was sent to an orphanage after Natalya’s arrest on false accusations of violence against police officers.

Varvara Galkina, a 10-year-old school student from Moscow, was reported by her school principal for a WhatsApp profile picture symbolizing support for Ukraine. Authorities searched Varvara’s home and threatened her mother with disciplinary measures and the deprivation of her parental rights. Varvara’s entire family had to leave Russia.

We left Russia solely because I was afraid that my children would be taken away. Police in Russia are doing what they want. They had said directly: we’ll lock you up and your children will go to an orphanage.

Varvara’s mother, Elena

You can learn more about the persecution of children amid Russia’s anti-war censorship in our full report.

Varvara and her family, who had to flee to the United Kingdom to escape arrest in Russia. Varvara was reported by her school principle for a WhatsApp profile picture which symbolised her support for Ukraine.

Deprivation from contacts with family as a reprisal 

The Russian authorities impose systematic denial of family contacts on arbitrarily detained government critics. This is especially evident in cases of those who have spoken out against Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine, prominent political activists and those whom the authorities associate with banned opposition movements. This practice aims to isolate and silence dissenters, inflicting additional suffering on them and their families. 

Authorities use various tactics to sever these contacts by:  

  • frequently denying requests for visits and calls during pretrial detention, often without justification, 
  • labelling family members as “witnesses” in trial proceedings, effectively barring them from contact,  
  • using manipulative tactics by transferring prisoners to another institution or   
  • placing prisoners in disciplinary cells for minor or fabricated violations right before a scheduled visit. 

These tactics extend the punishment to the prisoners’ families, causing significant psychological distress. For example, the opposition politician Vladimir Kara-Murza sentenced to 25-year imprisonment was denied contact with his family for over a year, and artist Aleksandra (Sasha) Skochilenko, serving 7-year imprisonment, was isolated from her partner for a year.  

After a year of separation, I am so glad I can see Sasha. I would love to hug her, but it is impossible.

Sonya Subbotina, Sasha Skochilenko’s partner 

The denial of contact with families not only violates international human rights standards of treatment detainees and prisoners but may also constitute cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment. Amnesty International’s underscores the systematic and politically motivated use of isolation against dissenters in its latest report

Sonia is holding a photo of her partner Aleksandra.
Sonia Subbotina holds a picture of her partner of Aleksandra Skochilenko, a songwriter and artist from St. Petersburg. Aleksandra was sentenced to seven years in prison for replacing price tags in a local supermarket with small anti-war labels.

What is Amnesty International doing to help?

Amnesty activists in 21 countries from Algeria to Iceland sent solidarity messages to individuals unjustlyimprisoned in Russia for protesting its illegal war of aggression in Ukraine, demanding their unconditional release.

Our researchers are exposing the worst abuses perpetrated against those who speak out. We have documented several types of reprisals against critics of the war, including deprivation or threats of deprivation of parental rights for anti-war activism and protest, denial of contact with family and friends in detention, and arbitrary placement in brutal punishment cells.

By shining a light, we can hold the authorities to account, and demand people are not deprived of their basic rights for speaking up for what they believe in. Around the world, protesters and activists are being silenced and punished while civil society faces growing challenges. We must unite to Protect the Protest.

Amnesty activists around the world are calling for Russia to stop its crackdown on protesters.

ACT NOW

Russia’s war censorship laws must go

Act in solidarity with people in Russia who dare to protest its war against Ukraine.