Vladimir Kara-Murza: Putin must not be allowed to win in Ukraine
‘Whatever happens, Vladimir Putin must not be allowed to win the war in Ukraine’
‘Whatever happens, Vladimir Putin must not be allowed to win the war in Ukraine’
Goodbye to Russia is an elegy for a lost country – the warm, chaotic Russia of unlimited possibility that welcomed the 18-year-old Sarah Rainsford in 1992. She stayed on, studied, worked in an Irish bar in St Petersburg, joined the BBC in 2000 and, after spells in other parts of the world, returned to Moscow as a Russian correspondent from 2014. Her memoir’s 30-year period covers an entire cycle in Russian politics – as Anna Akhmatova might have put it, from vegetarian to carnivore. In August 2021, Rainsford was stopped at the Russian border and refused entry as a ‘threat to national security’. A few weeks later, she was expelled
‘He does not have any rights to phone calls or visits,’ his wife Evgenia says
A backdoor deal could help Ukraine in its patriotic war against Putin’s Russia
‘When you all burn in hell, your grandfathers will throw firewood into your fire’
Protest against the war has largely been evident in small-scale and personal acts of defiance
Navalny, Yashin and Kara-Murza’s self-sacrifice undoubtedly makes them moral titans
For a great deal of Russians, love of their country and of their government are two different things