Podcasts about Boris Nemtsov

20th and 21st-century Russian scientist, statesman and liberal politician

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Boris Nemtsov

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Best podcasts about Boris Nemtsov

Latest podcast episodes about Boris Nemtsov

Guerra Fria
É possível fazer as pazes entre Ucrânia e Washington?

Guerra Fria

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2025 22:36


Nuno Rogeiro e José Milhazes discutem as conclusões da cimeira de Londres e a situação na Ucrânia após o episódio de humilhação a Zelensky na Casa Branca. José Milhazes destaca a continuidade da ajuda militar e a importância da participação ucraniana nas negociações. A criação de uma força de apoio e a dissuasão europeia contra invasões russas pode ser a opção viável para dar a volta ao conflito. É preciso ajuda e ações concretas para auxiliar a Ucrânia. O Guerra Fria foi exibido dia 2 de março na SIC.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Sur le fil
Vladimir Kara-Mourza : résistant inébranlable à Poutine (REDIFF)

Sur le fil

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2024 18:31


Dans cet épisode de Sur le Fil diffusé pour la première fois le 12 septembre, nous vous proposons une rencontre avec une personnalité extraordinaire, Vladimir Kara-Mourza. C'est l'un des dissidents russes les plus persécutés par le Kremlin. Imaginez qu'a 32 ans, vous perdez votre mentor et meilleur ami, un dissident comme vous, en l'occurrence Boris Nemtsov, tué par balles à quelques pas du Kremlin. Et, seulement trois mois plus tard, vous êtes victime d'une tentative d'empoisonnement, puis une nouvelle fois deux ans après, en 2017. Que feriez-vous ? Vladimir Kara-Mourza lui, n'a jamais baissé les bras. Il n'a eu de cesse de s'opposer à Vladimir Poutine, puis de dénoncer l'invasion de l'Ukraine, avant d'être condamné pour trahison à 25 ans de réclusion en 2023.Finalement, le destin a encore frappé à sa porte, mais de manière plus positive cette fois : c'était fin juillet, lorsqu'il a été extrait de sa été tiré de sa prison de haute sécurité en Sibérie dans le cadre d'un échange de prisonniers avec la Russie et les Etats-Unis notamment. L'AFP a pu longuement interviewer Vladimir Kara-Mourza, avant son entretien avec Emmanuel Macron, lundi 9 septembre.Il nous a raconté les coulisses de cette libération incroyable. Et insisté sur l'importance de continuer à résister à Poutine, avec une détermination intacte.Interview : Anna Smolchenko Stuart Williams et Michaëla Cancela-KiefferDoublage de Vladimir Kara-Mourza : Sébastien CastéranTournage : Arnaud RichardRéalisation : Michaëla Cancela-KiefferPremière diffusion le 12 septembre.Pour aller plus loin: Le Poison de Poutine, un podcast présenté par Antoine Boyer et Sarah-Lou Lepers. Avec Jonathan Brown et Andrea Palasciano.Sur le Fil est le podcast quotidien de l'AFP. Vous avez des commentaires ? Ecrivez-nous à podcast@afp.com. Vous pouvez aussi nous envoyer une note vocale par Whatsapp au + 33 6 79 77 38 45. Si vous aimez, abonnez-vous, parlez de nous autour de vous et laissez-nous plein d'étoiles sur votre plateforme de podcasts préférée pour mieux faire connaître notre programme. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Sur le fil
Vladimir Kara-Mourza, résistant inébranlable à Poutine (ENTRETIEN)

Sur le fil

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 18:31


Dans cet épisode de Sur le Fil, nous vous proposons une rencontre avec une personnalité extraodinaire, Vladimir Kara-Mourza. C'est l'un des dissidents russes les plus persécutés par le Kremlin. Imaginez qu'a 32 ans, vous perdez votre mentor et meilleur ami, un dissident comme vous, en l'occurence Boris Nemtsov, tué par balles à quelques pas du Kremlin. Et, seulement trois mois plus tard, vous êtes victime d'une tentative d'empoisonnement, puis une nouvelle fois deux ans après, en 2017. Que feriez-vous ? Vladimir Kara-Mourza lui, n'a jamais baissé les bras. Il n'a eu de cesse de s'opposer à Vladimir Poutine, puis de dénoncer l'invasion de l'Ukraine, avant d'être condamné pour trahison à 25 ans de réclusion en 2023.Fnalement, le destin a encore frappé à sa porte, mais de manière plus positive cette fois : c'était fin juillet, lorsqu'il a été extrait de sa été tiré de sa prison de haute sécurité en Sibérie dans le cadre d'un échange de prisonniers avec la Russie et les Etats-Unis notamment. L'AFP a pu longuement interviewer Vladimir Kara-Mourza, avant son entretien avec Emmanuel Macron, lundi 9 septembre.Il nous a raconté les coulisses de cette libération incroyable. Et insisté sur l'importance de continuer à résister à Poutine, avec une détermination intacte.Interview : Anna Smolchenko Stuart Williams et Michaëla Cancela-KiefferDoublage de Vladimir Kara-Mourza : Sébastien CastéranTournage : Arnaud RichardRéalisation : Michaëla Cancela-KiefferPour aller plus loin: Le Poison de Poutine, un podcast présenté par Antoine Boyer et Sarah-Lou Lepers. Avec Jonathan Brown et Andrea Palasciano.Sur le Fil est le podcast quotidien de l'AFP. Vous avez des commentaires ? Ecrivez-nous à podcast@afp.com. Vous pouvez aussi nous envoyer une note vocale par Whatsapp au + 33 6 79 77 38 45. Si vous aimez, abonnez-vous, parlez de nous autour de vous et laissez-nous plein d'étoiles sur votre plateforme de podcasts préférée pour mieux faire connaître notre programme. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

L’heure du crime : les archives de Jacques Pradel

Le 27 février 2015, Boris Nemtsov, ex-vice-Premier ministre sous Boris Eltsine et une des figures de la contestation au pouvoir de Vladimir Poutine, est assassiné de quatre coups de feu dans le dos à quelques pas du Kremlin. Cet assassinat s'ajoute à une longue liste de morts violentes d'opposants au régime de Vladimir Poutine. Vladimir Fédorovski, ancien diplomate russe, revient sur ces assassinats qui ont marqué la Russie.

Battlegrounds: International Perspectives
Battlegrounds w/ H.R. McMaster: The Russian Opposition and Ukraine: A Conversation with Vladimir Milov | Hoover Institution

Battlegrounds: International Perspectives

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2024 39:57


In this episode of Battlegrounds, H.R. McMaster and Vladimir Milov discuss the war in Ukraine, the status of the Russian opposition, and prospects for the restoration of peace, Wednesday, April 10, 2024. Vladimir Milov, Russian opposition politician, publicist, economist, and former advisor to the late Russian opposition leaders Boris Nemtsov and Alexei Navalny, joins Hoover senior fellow H.R. McMaster to share insights on Russia's recent presidential election, the state of political opposition in Russia, and the country's war against Ukraine. A vocal critic of Vladimir Putin and the hypernationalist group of leaders who dominate the government, Milov reflects on the significance of Navalny's recent murder, his own vision and the prospects for the opposition movement, and the effects of Russia's war against Ukraine on the Russian people, its economy, and on Putin's grip on power. ABOUT THE SPEAKERS Vladimir Milov is a Russian opposition politician, publicist, economist, and former advisor to the late Russian opposition leaders Boris Nemtsov and Alexei Navalny. Milov served as Russia's deputy minister of energy in 2002. In 2003, he founded the Institute of Energy Policy, a think tank. Milov is a vocal critic of Vladimir Putin and the hypernationalist group of leaders who dominate the government. H.R. McMaster is the Fouad and Michelle Ajami Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He is also the Bernard and Susan Liautaud Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute and lecturer at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business. He was the 25th assistant to the president for National Security Affairs. Upon graduation from the United States Military Academy in 1984, McMaster served as a commissioned officer in the United States Army for thirty-four years before retiring as a Lieutenant General in June 2018.

Liberal Europe Podcast
Presidential Elections and the Situation in Russia with Denis Bilunov

Liberal Europe Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2024 27:56


What is going on in Russia on the eve of the presidential election? Was Alexei Navalny assassinated? And what impact does the Russian war in Ukraine has on Russia itself? Leszek Jazdzewski (Fundacja Liberte!) talks with Denis Bilunov, a PhD candidate at Charles University, a founding member of the Prague Russian Antiwar committee. In 2005-2015, he was a public person in Russian opposition, the organizer of mass protests in 2011-12, and the Executive Director of Solidarnost movement (led by Boris Nemtsov and Garry Kasparov). Tune in for the talk! This podcast is produced by the European Liberal Forum in collaboration with Movimento Liberal Social and Fundacja Liberté!, with the financial support of the European Parliament. Neither the European Parliament nor the European Liberal Forum are responsible for the content or for any use that be made of.

HARDtalk
HARDtalk: Defying Putin

HARDtalk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2024 22:59


In a special programme in the run up to Russia's presidential election in March, HARDtalk looks back on interviews with those few Russians who have been ready to stand up to Vladimir Putin. From the late Boris Nemtsov to Alexei Navalny whose death was announced recently, what motivates those ready to risk everything to challenge Putin?

Heimsglugginn
Grimm örlög andstæðinga Pútíns

Heimsglugginn

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2024 22:55


Bogi Ágústsson , Eyrún Magnúsdóttir og Þórunn Elísabet Bogadóttir ræddu örlög þeirra sem hafa sett sig upp á móti Vladimír Pútín Rússlandsforseta. Alexei Navalny hefur bæst í hóp þeirra sem hafa dáið beint eða óbeint vegna andstöðunnar við forsetann. Á Vesturlöndum er litið svo á að Navalny hafi verið myrtur að undirlagi Pútíns. Í hópi þeirra Rússa sem handlangarar Pútíns hafa myrt eru meðal annarra Alexander Litvinenko, Anna Politkovskaya, Sergei Magnitsky, Boris Nemtsov og Jevgení Prígósjín. Þá ræddu þau í lokin um skýrslu sænsku öryggislögreglunnar SÄPO um ógnanir við Svíþjóð. Þar segir að mest hætta stafi af Rússlandi, Kína og Íran. Charlotte von Essen, yfirmaður SÄPO, sagði að friði væri ógnað og ástandið yrði alvarlegt í fyrirsjáanlegri framtíð. Grænlenska landsstjórnin í gær utanríkis-öryggis- og varnarmálastefnu og þar kemur meðal annars fram að stefnt skuli að aukinni samvinnu við Norður-Ameríku og Ísland. Þetta er stefnumótun til næsta áratugar og að henni standa allir flokkar á þingi nema einn, Naleraq.

Gaslit Nation
Trump Backers Kill Navalny

Gaslit Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 52:37


February 20 marks two years since Putin launched his total war in Ukraine. February also marks the assassination of Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, gunned down in the shadow of the Kremlin in 2015, on the eve of his anti-war march. And now Alexei Navalny, killed in a Siberian gulag, his body reportedly covered in bruises and kept from his family.    It may seem like Putin is winning, with Trump sailing into the Republican nomination, and MAGA lackey Mike Johnson deliberately stopping aid to Ukraine in Congress, costing countless lives and helping Russia advance. And the breaking news this week: Republicans in Congress based their impeachment proceeding of Biden on a Russian intelligence op, pulling out all the stops to help Trump steal the White House with the Kremlin's help, again. One thing is clear: Putin is scared. The reality is that Putin's fragile house of cards has turned Russia into a powder keg, as Navalny's widow, Yulia Navalnaya, vows to continue her husband's work.    In this special episode, Andrea and Terrell Starr of the Black Diplomats Podcast and Substack discuss the assassintion of Navalny and the work ahead to build a meaningful opposition, the mainstream media continuing to normalize Trump by labeling his 16-week abortion ban as “less restrictive”, and the triumph of Black prosecutors Tish James and Fani Willis in the larger American story of hard-fought progress.    This week's bonus show answers questions from our listeners at the Democracy Defender level and higher. (If you haven't submitted your questions yet, get ‘em in for next week's Q&A!) Inspired by our listeners, this week's bonus show covers prison incarceration rates in the U.S. vs. Russia and what that can tell us about our homegrown authoritarian threats in the GOP, whether voting by mail is safe this election (it is!), and more!    Thank you to everyone who supports the show – we could not make Gaslit Nation without you!   Not a member? Join the conversation with a community of listeners at Patreon.com/Gaslit and get bonus shows, all episodes ad free, submit questions to our regular Q&As, get exclusive invites to live events, and more. Show Notes:   Event: Thursday February 29 at 1pm – Russian-diaspora led roundtable on Russian anti-war activities  https://www.facebook.com/events/439307928421886   Republicans in Congress initiated an impeachment proceeding of Biden based on a Russian intelligence op: https://twitter.com/rgoodlaw/status/1760122411016421457   Thread:  “JUST IN: Alexander Smirnov told the feds during an interview after his arrest that ‘officials associated with Russian intelligence' were involved in passing a story about Hunter Biden.” https://twitter.com/alanfeuer/status/1760056078992081166   Hunter Biden says special counsel used Alexander Smirnov's discredited bribery claims to derail his plea deal https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/20/politics/alexander-smirnov-hunter-biden/index.html   Scientology Leader David Miscavige Served With Human Trafficking Lawsuit Miscavige had reportedly evaded process servers 27 times over four months before a judge said he was considered served. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/scientology-leader-david-miscavige-served-with-human-trafficking-lawsuit_n_63ee6cb9e4b02c25737b92ca   Donald Trump Tells Allies He Backs 16-Week Abortion Ban GOP frontunner backs less restrictive ban than many in party Biden stepping up attacks on Trump over abortion restrictions https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-02-16/trump-tells-allies-he-backs-16-week-abortion-ban?cmpid%3D=socialflow-twitter-politics&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=socialflow-organic&utm_source=twitter&utm_content=politics   “Yulia Navalnaya, the wife of Alexei Navalny, received a standing ovation from the audience as she began a speech to the Munich Security Conference just hours after hearing about the “horrific news” of her husband's death.” https://twitter.com/Telegraph/status/1758526751611802082   Police have detained several people at a makeshift gathering in memory of @Navalny in Moscow, as others throw snow & shout "shame!" https://twitter.com/AlecLuhn/status/1758549540108411094   “Fox Host: I think you could venture to wonder if Navalny would have died, been treated how he was, if there were a different president in office” https://twitter.com/Acyn/status/1758543958773293089   “Statement about Navalny from Zelensky, a man who understands that Putin plans the same fate for him and the other leaders of Ukraine.”  https://twitter.com/RonFilipkowski/status/1758541607723299277   “Outside the Russian embassy in Belgrade, some folks not happy about the Navalny thing.” https://twitter.com/JayinKyiv/status/1758539061629796446   “Today in Moscow, individuals are quietly forming lines to place flowers in memory of Navalny, the sole mode of silent protest permitted by the authorities at this time.” https://twitter.com/highbrow_nobrow/status/1758543715059282420   “"Alexei Navalny was asked what his message would be to people if he was killed. His response from the Academy Award winning documentary about him directed by @DanielRoher"” https://twitter.com/yashar/status/1758556265285042284   "Fani Willis: Let's go on and have a conversation. I don't need anything from a man. A man is not a plan. A man is a companion. I don't need anybody to foot my bills. The only man who has foot my bills completely is my daddy. @Acyn" https://twitter.com/highbrow_nobrow/status/1758247461993283909   Tulsi Gabbard, Rand Paul Placed on List of Russian Propagandists by Ukraine https://www.newsweek.com/tulsi-gabbard-rand-paul-placed-list-russian-propagandists-ukraine-1727831   Justice Department Transfers Approximately $500,000 in Forfeited Russian Funds to Estonia for Benefit of Ukraine https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-transfers-approximately-500000-forfeited-russian-funds-estonia-benefit   Alexei Navalny death latest: Putin critic's mother won't see body for 14 days ‘as chemical analysis ordered' https://www.newsbreak.com/news/3338204682172-alexei-navalny-death-latest-putin-critics-mother-wont-see-body-for-14-days-as-chemical-analysis-ordered?noAds=1&_f=app_share&s=i3   Arrests, vigils, and Kremlin silence: Russia marks Alexey Navalny's death https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/18/europe/russia-alexey-navalny-arrests-death-intl/index.html   Inside Polar Wolf, the sadistic centrepiece of Putin's gulag archipelago Conditions in the Arctic penal colony where Alexei Navalny died are essentially 'legalised torture', say survivors https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/02/17/inside-putin-gulag-archipelago-beating-torture-rape-suicide/   Kremlin runs disinformation campaign to undermine Zelensky, documents show https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/02/16/russian-disinformation-zelensky-zaluzhny/?utm_source=alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=wp_news_alert_revere_special_report&location=alert   Counting the 'colossal' cost of capturing Avdiivka: Russia could have suffered 30,000 casualties and lost over 400 tanks, IFVs https://www.businessinsider.com/russia-lost-thousands-of-personnel-and-400-tanks-in-avdiivka-2024#:~:text=Counting%20the%20'colossal'%20cost%20of,lost%20over%20400%20tanks%2C%20IFVs&text=The%20battle%20of%20Avdiivka%20proved,withdrew%20from%20Avdiivka%20this%20weekend.   Life Imitates Art as a ‘Master and Margarita' Movie Stirs Russia An American director's adaptation of the beloved novel is resonating with moviegoers, who may recognize some similarities in its satire of authoritarian rule. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/16/movies/master-and-margarita-movie-russia-reaction.html   Fact-checking Trump's comments urging Russia to invade ‘delinquent' NATO members https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/fact-checking-trumps-comments-urging-russia-to-invade-delinquent-nato-members   Black Diplomats Podcast: https://www.blackdiplomats.net/   Black Diplomats Substack: https://terrellstarr.substack.com/   Be sure to check out helpukrainewin.com, made by a Gaslit Nation listener!

De Wereld | BNR
Opinie | Drink geen thee

De Wereld | BNR

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 2:49


Om twee redenen kijken we knarsetandend naar de liquidaties van tegenstanders van Poetin: hij laat die openlijk uitvoeren, en wij zijn machteloos. Hij heeft ook wel eens gezegd dat hij met de vijanden van het moederland afrekent, waar die zich ook bevinden. Aleksei Navalny is de zoveelste in een lange rij. Misschien was de arrestatie van vier Russische spionnen in Den Haag, in 2018, het meest illustratief. Het ging om een sullige poging om het gebouw van de OPCW te hacken. Dat mislukte. Ze reisden onder hun eigen namen, hadden paspoorten met opeenvolgende nummers, hadden een taxibonnetje op zak met het adres van de Russische geheime dienst, maakten in Den Haag foto's van elkaar. Het Kremlin leek te schreeuwen: ja, ja, wij zitten hier achter. De moord op de journalist Anna Politkovskaja in 2006 leidde tot een onderzoek door de overgelopen oud-KGB-spion Aleksander Litvinenko, die vervolgens in Londen werd vermoord met een kopje thee waarin radioactief polonium zat. Hetzelfde overkwam Pussy Riot oprichter Pjotr Verzoliv, die op het nippertje overleefde. Net als oud-spion Skripal en zijn dochter. Idem Vladimir Kara-Muzra, een invloedrijke oppositiefiguur, die zelfs twee vergiftigingen overleefde. En natuurlijk Boris Nemtsov, oud-vicepremier en later keiharde Poetin-criticaster, die op een brug, vlak bij het Kremlin, in een zee van kogels om het leven kwam toen hij met zijn vriendin een wandeling maakte. Of Prigozjin, de baas van huurlingenleger Wagner, die voortdurend openlijk tekeerging tegen Poetin, een staatsgreep probeerde, en vervolgens in zijn eigen vliegtuig werd opgeblazen. Het is een incompleet overzicht, maar iedereen kent de voorbeelden en de waarschuwingen. Drink in Rusland geen thee, kom niet in de buurt van een open raam, denk niet dat je in het buitenland veilig bent. En denk vooral aan het woord van Poetin: we vinden je overal.  Wat ons terugbrengt op onze frustratie: Poetin doet dit allemaal openlijk, arrogant, zelfovertuigd, provocerend. De EU komt niet verder dan het Mensenrechtensanctieregime – een soort sanctiereglement – naar Navalny te noemen. Daar slaapt Poetin geen minuut korter door. ‘Wie doet me wat?' straalt hij uit. Het antwoord is: niemand – helemaal niemand.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Bernard Hammelburg | BNR
Opinie | Drink geen thee

Bernard Hammelburg | BNR

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 2:49


Om twee redenen kijken we knarsetandend naar de liquidaties van tegenstanders van Poetin: hij laat die openlijk uitvoeren, en wij zijn machteloos. Hij heeft ook wel eens gezegd dat hij met de vijanden van het moederland afrekent, waar die zich ook bevinden. Aleksei Navalny is de zoveelste in een lange rij. Misschien was de arrestatie van vier Russische spionnen in Den Haag, in 2018, het meest illustratief. Het ging om een sullige poging om het gebouw van de OPCW te hacken. Dat mislukte. Ze reisden onder hun eigen namen, hadden paspoorten met opeenvolgende nummers, hadden een taxibonnetje op zak met het adres van de Russische geheime dienst, maakten in Den Haag foto's van elkaar. Het Kremlin leek te schreeuwen: ja, ja, wij zitten hier achter. De moord op de journalist Anna Politkovskaja in 2006 leidde tot een onderzoek door de overgelopen oud-KGB-spion Aleksander Litvinenko, die vervolgens in Londen werd vermoord met een kopje thee waarin radioactief polonium zat. Hetzelfde overkwam Pussy Riot oprichter Pjotr Verzoliv, die op het nippertje overleefde. Net als oud-spion Skripal en zijn dochter. Idem Vladimir Kara-Muzra, een invloedrijke oppositiefiguur, die zelfs twee vergiftigingen overleefde. En natuurlijk Boris Nemtsov, oud-vicepremier en later keiharde Poetin-criticaster, die op een brug, vlak bij het Kremlin, in een zee van kogels om het leven kwam toen hij met zijn vriendin een wandeling maakte. Of Prigozjin, de baas van huurlingenleger Wagner, die voortdurend openlijk tekeerging tegen Poetin, een staatsgreep probeerde, en vervolgens in zijn eigen vliegtuig werd opgeblazen. Het is een incompleet overzicht, maar iedereen kent de voorbeelden en de waarschuwingen. Drink in Rusland geen thee, kom niet in de buurt van een open raam, denk niet dat je in het buitenland veilig bent. En denk vooral aan het woord van Poetin: we vinden je overal.  Wat ons terugbrengt op onze frustratie: Poetin doet dit allemaal openlijk, arrogant, zelfovertuigd, provocerend. De EU komt niet verder dan het Mensenrechtensanctieregime – een soort sanctiereglement – naar Navalny te noemen. Daar slaapt Poetin geen minuut korter door. ‘Wie doet me wat?' straalt hij uit. Het antwoord is: niemand – helemaal niemand.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

La ContraCrónica
Navalni: crónica de una muerte anunciada

La ContraCrónica

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2024 45:43


El viernes pasado se comunicó la muerte a los 47 años de Alexei Navalni, uno de los más significados líderes de la oposición rusa. La muerte se produjo en una colonia penal de Siberia adonde fue trasladado a finales del año pasado. La causa de su muerte se desconoce. Las autoridades penitenciarias informaron que se desplomó tras dar un paseo, perdió el conocimiento y no pudo ser reanimado. Se encontraba desde hace poco más de dos años encarcelado. Cumplía tres condenas de prisión que sumaban un total de más de 30 años por cargos que tanto él como sus partidarios y distintos organismos internacionales aseguran que eran fabricados. Antes de eso fue detenido nada más aterrizar en Moscú en enero de 2021. Regresaba de Alemania, donde se había recuperado de un envenenamiento con un agente nervioso, el Novichok, utilizado profusamente en tiempos de la Unión Soviética. Navalni culpó de su envenenamiento al Kremlin. La muerte de Navalni quita de en medio la última oposición política real que queda en Rusia tras la invasión de Ucrania. El régimen, que ya era autoritario antes, se ha transformado en una dictadura de facto caracterizada por una feroz represión. Las leyes que persiguen la libertad de expresión son draconianas y disentir con la política dictada desde el Kremlin constituye un delito. Tras conocerse la muerte de Navalni, en Moscú, San Petersburgo y otras ciudades rusas sus partidarios colocaron altares con flores que fueron retirados inmediatamente por la policía. Fuera de Rusia también se produjeron manifestaciones de ciudadanos rusos, tanto en la Unión Europea como países que pertenecieron a la URSS. La esposa de Navalni, Yulia Navalnaya, sorprendió a los participantes a la Conferencia de Seguridad de Múnich tras conocerse la noticia de su muerte. Dijo a los asistentes que quiere que “Putin y todo su círculo sepan que serán responsables de lo que han hecho con nuestro país, con mi familia y con mi esposo" para rematar afirmando que “ese día llegará muy pronto". En los tres años que ha pasado entre rejas, Navalni ha padecido unas condiciones lamentables. Aparte de la bien conocida dureza de las prisiones rusas, con Navalni se ensañaron. Le privaban de sueño para atormentarle gratuitamente. Estuvo en celdas de aislamiento en 27 ocasiones y fue trasladado de prisión en prisión restringiendo las visitas y los contactos con el exterior. La oposición rusa, silenciada y perseguida, poco podía hacer por él. En el extranjero las quejas eran continuas, pero tras la invasión de Ucrania su caso pasó a un segundo plano. El desenlace de Navalni no ha extrañado a nadie. Putin lleva años debilitando a la oposición. Actualmente se encuentran en prisión Ilia Yashin y Vladimir Kara Murza, ambos en condiciones parecidas a la de Navalni. Hace nueve años Boris Nemtsov, que era el principal opositor del país, fue asesinado en Moscú. Siempre sucede lo mismo, tan pronto como cualquier figura opositora sobresale un poco y aglutina a suficientes seguidores, los servicios de seguridad actúan. Unas veces cortan por lo sano y eliminan al opositor, en otras sobreviene una pesadilla legal con acusaciones inventadas y juicios teledirigidos desde el Kremlin. Dentro de menos de un mes se celebrarán elecciones presidenciales y Putin no quiere sorpresas ni que nadie le lleve la contraria, aunque sea desde prisión. En La ContraRéplica: 25:08 - Los rusos frente a Putin 34:07 - Bienestar animal en las mascotas 41:00 - La maldición de las materias primas Este episodio cuenta con la colaboración de Fundación Mapfre - https://www.fundacionmapfre.org/ · Canal de Telegram: https://t.me/lacontracronica · “Hispanos. Breve historia de los pueblos de habla hispana”… https://amzn.to/428js1G · “La ContraHistoria de España. Auge, caída y vuelta a empezar de un país en 28 episodios”… https://amzn.to/3kXcZ6i · “Lutero, Calvino y Trento, la Reforma que no fue”… https://amzn.to/3shKOlK · “La ContraHistoria del comunismo”… https://amzn.to/39QP2KE Apoya La Contra en: · Patreon... https://www.patreon.com/diazvillanueva · iVoox... https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-contracronica_sq_f1267769_1.html · Paypal... https://www.paypal.me/diazvillanueva Sígueme en: · Web... https://diazvillanueva.com · Twitter... https://twitter.com/diazvillanueva · Facebook... https://www.facebook.com/fernandodiazvillanueva1/ · Instagram... https://www.instagram.com/diazvillanueva · Linkedin… https://www.linkedin.com/in/fernando-d%C3%ADaz-villanueva-7303865/ · Flickr... https://www.flickr.com/photos/147276463@N05/?/ · Pinterest... https://www.pinterest.com/fernandodiazvillanueva Encuentra mis libros en: · Amazon... https://www.amazon.es/Fernando-Diaz-Villanueva/e/B00J2ASBXM #FernandoDiazVillanueva #navalni #rusia Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals

Newshour
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny reported dead

Newshour

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2024 50:24


The Russian prison service says that jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny has died. His friends blame the Kremlin for his death, international leaders condemn his treatment. We hear from people who know him well and get the response of international leaders. Also in the programme: why the Egyptian authorities are clearing an area along their country's border with Gaza; and why the practice of what's known as swatting is taking off in the United States.Photo: Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny attends a rally in memory of politician Boris Nemtsov in Moscow in February 2019 Credit: REUTERS/Tatyana Makeyeva/File Photo

Kreisky Forum Talks
Litvinenko, Timchenko, Nemtsova, Tsepkalo: COURAGE!

Kreisky Forum Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 63:11


Tessa Szyszkowitz in conversation with Marina Litvinenko, Galina Timchenko, Zhanna Nemtsova & Veronica Tsepkalo COURAGE! How to fight for human rights in Russia On the 75th anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 2023, Russian women human rights activists demand pluralism, freedom of expression and the release of the political prisoners in Russian prisons: Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights UDHR, proclaimed at the Palais de Chaillot in Paris on December 10, 1948, states: „Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.“ December 10, 2023 marks the 75th anniversary of one of the world's most ground-breaking international commitments. Based on the UDHR, a range of more specific international human rights treaties have been adopted, to which also Russia is a party.” In 1993, the Vienna World Conference on Human Rights set important initiatives to turn the promises of the UDHR into concrete action. The importance of the UDHR is highlighted by the human rights situation in Russia and Belarus. Critics of the Russian president and the Russian war against Ukraine are imprisoned under inhumane conditions, forced into exile, persecuted, arrested, incarcerated, poisoned, or killed. Among the most important critics are imprisoned opposition politician Alexei Navalny, journalist Vladimir Kara-Murza and Belarusian opposition politician Maria Kalesnikawa. Journalist Anna Politkovskaya and whistleblower Alexander Litvinenko were murdered in 2006. Marina Litvinenko, widow of murdered Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko, is fighting for political murders to be recognized as such and for those who commissioned them to be held responsible. She lives in London. Galina Timchenko, is the co-founder, CEO, and publisher of exiled Russian media Meduza in Riga. Zhanna Nemtsova, daughter of the murdered politician Boris Nemtsov, is founder of the Boris Nemtsov Foundation „For Freedom“. Veronica Tsepkalo, Chairwoman of the Belarus Women's Foundation Chaired by Tessa Szyszkowitz, Austrian journalist and author. She writes for Austrian and German publications such as Falter & Tagesspiegel, she is also a Distinguished Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute in London.   In Kooperation mit dem Bundesministerium für Europäische und Internationale Angelegenheiten

Européen de la semaine
Vladimir Kara-Mourza, premier opposant condamné en Russie pour haute trahison

Européen de la semaine

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2023 3:33


Lundi 17 avril 2023, Vladimir Kara-Mourza a été condamné à 25 ans de colonie pénitentiaire par la justice russe après ce que l'on peut qualifier de parodie de procès. C'est la peine que réclamait le parquet russe pour cet opposant notoire, poursuivi pour haute trahison, diffusion de fausses informations sur l'armée russe et également pour travail illégal pour une organisation qualifiée d'indésirable. Vladimir Kara-Mourza, qui a déjà été empoisonné à deux reprises en 2015 et 2017, des tentatives d'assassinats qui sont attribuées au pouvoir russe, a fait face à une justice russe qui démontre depuis des mois, et même des années, que l'État de droit n'existe plus en Russie. (Rediffusion du 16 avril 2023)Depuis le début de l'offensive russe en Ukraine, peu sont ceux qui osent encore braver les interdits et crier haut et fort leur rejet d'une guerre injustifiée. Vladimir Kara-Mourza en fait partie. Ce jeune opposant de 41 ans, père de trois enfants, est resté en Russie après le déclenchement de l'offensive, malgré les risques que cela impliquait, et ce, alors que sa femme et ses enfants vivent aux États-Unis.Marie Mendras, politologue au CNRS et professeur à Sciences Po Paris, explique pourquoi cet ancien journaliste a souhaité continuer à mener son combat dans son pays malgré les menaces : « Comme il le raconte lui-même, il a été fasciné par le travail politique que menait Boris Nemtsov. Boris Nemtsov était vice-Premier ministre de Boris Eltsine dans les années 1990 et dès l'arrivée au pouvoir de Vladimir Poutine en 1999, Nemtsov a été l'un des rares à comprendre que l'ère qui s'ouvrait serait une ère dangereuse pour la démocratie et les libertés. Et en février 2015, quand Boris Nemtsov a été assassiné, Kara-Mourza a décidé de consacrer toute sa vie à combattre un régime qu'il considérait déjà à l'époque comme une dictature et un régime criminel. »Le premier opposant condamné pour haute trahisonVladimir Kara-Mourza, qui a joué un rôle clef dans l'adoption en 2012 aux États-Unis de la loi Magnitski, est considéré comme un ennemi par le régime de Vladimir Poutine. Et après avoir critiqué les autorités russes et l'armée suite au déclenchement de l'invasion en Ukraine, le Kremlin a semble-t-il décidé de s'acharner contre lui, comme le détaille Gilles Favarel-Garrigues, directeur de recherche au CNRS (et auteur du livre La verticale de la peur : ordres et allégeances en Russie sous Poutine) : « Vladimir Kara-Mourza est un bouc émissaire fabriqué par le pouvoir pour accréditer l'idée selon laquelle il y a une alliance entre des ennemis extérieurs et intérieurs qui veulent déstabiliser le régime. Ce n'est pas le premier à en faire les frais. Mais c'est en tout cas avec une sévérité inédite que Vladimir Kara-Mourza va être condamné. »À lire aussiRussie : Alexeï Navalny, le «masque de fer» de Vladimir PoutineCelui que l'on surnomme parfois « l'opposant numéro 2 », après Alexeï Navalny, est depuis le 17 avril le premier opposant à être condamné pour haute trahison. Le parquet russe l'a condamné à 25 ans de prison. Et malgré ce que cette peine implique, Vladimir Kara-Mourza n'en démord pas et se dit fier de son engagement, ce qui n'étonne pas Gilles Favarel-Garrigues :« C'est quelqu'un qui a toujours fait face aux épreuves qu'il a subies. C'est quelqu'un qui a fait l'objet de nombreuses persécutions et de nombreuses poursuites judiciaires en Russie, donc je pense qu'on est là face à des opposants qui n'ont plus rien à perdre. Il fait penser, à ce niveau-là, à Alexeï Navalny. Il subit la dictature de la loi comme on dit en Russie, à plein régime. C'est un choix qui vise sans doute à forger aussi une image de détermination par rapport au pouvoir russe. Mais on ne peut que s'inquiéter pour ces opposants et pour le fait qu'ils puissent terminer leur vie en prison. »Un homme qui fait peur au KremlinLa santé de Vladimir Kara-Mourza inquiète. Et dans un pays avec un régime que beaucoup qualifient de totalitaire, celui à qui le Conseil de l'Europe a décerné en 2022 le prix Vaclav-Havel des droits de l'homme pourrait bien subir des conditions de détention inhumaine. Car comme l'explique Marie Mendras, les autorités le craignent : « Pourquoi est-ce que Vladimir Poutine et ses services de renseignement ont décidé de se rassurer en se disant qu'ils peuvent écraser Vladimir Kara-Mourza et le laisser mourir dans un camp à régime sévère ? Eh bien, c'est parce que cet homme leur fait peur. »Vladimir Kara-Mourza, après une parodie de justice, a été condamné à 25 ans de détention dans une colonie pénitentiaire. Il s'agit de la plus longue peine infligée depuis la fin de l'Union soviétique pour une activité politique, une décision qui a suscité de nombreuses critiques dans le monde après un procès qualifié de simulacre et de procès politique.À lire aussiRussie : l'opposant Vladimir Kara-Mourza condamné à 25 ans de prison

LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA
Érase una vez el Este #6 - Con la muerte en los talones

LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2023 36:07


LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA presenta la audioserie titulada "Érase una vez el Este". Este es el sexto capítulo, y se se titula "Con la muerte en los talones". Esta serie o audioserie en la que se mezclan la realidad y la ficción, consiste en una serie de programas en los que escucharéis como se habla de hechos reales que han sucedido en los últimos años y también en fechas recientes en Europa, concretamente en la zona del este de Europa. Como digo, es una audioserie muy conectada con la actualidad en los momentos en la que estamos presentándola. Y este proyecto no es idea mía, sino que es idea de dos amigos de LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA, como son Juan Lamas, malagueño, historiador, escritor y guionista, y Verónica, barcelonesa, licenciada en administración y finanzas, actriz y cantante amateur y gran apasionada por la historia. Ellos son los artífices de esto y les agradezco su trabajo. Os dejo con el sexto capítulo titulado "Con la muerte en los talones". Sinopsis: El Mayor Médico Lysachev invita a Aleksandra a un viaje maravilloso a las orillas del Volga, sin embargo ella rechaza el ofrecimiento orgullosa creyendo que al igual que todas las personas que le rodean, sólo quiere aprovecharse de ella. Desamparada y sin amigos, sigue atrapada en Dombass y el Doctor Polischuck reaparece para llevar a cabo su Sagrada Misión. Este es un Podcast producido y dirigido por Gerión de Contestania, miembro del grupo "Divulgadores de la Historia". Somos un podcast perteneciente al sello iVoox Originals. Canal de YouTube de LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfHTOD0Z_yC-McS71OhfHIA *Si te ha gustado el programa dale al "Like", ya que con esto ayudarás a darnos más visibilidad. También puedes dejar tu comentario, decirnos en que hemos fallado o errado y también puedes sugerir un tema para que sea tratado en un futuro programa de LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA. Gracias. Música del audio: -El podcact LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA cuenta con licencia de Epidemic Sound. Enlaces a los cortes de noticiarios y a la música empleada en el programa: Noticias: -GUERRA RUSIA-UCRANIA: La INTELIGENCIA de EE.UU. busca INDECISOS que quieran ser CONFIDENTES | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q77LGBm9y9k -GUERRA UCRANIA: Los DISIDENTES RUSOS recurren a TELEGRAM como alternativa a la PROPAGANDA | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSBiHb0PW34&t=68s -Russian soldier shoots Ak and yells cyka blyat https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vV6SbJMYC44 -Propagandaist Simonyan "thanks" FSB for closing fake assassination attempt on Solovyov https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4skQZ5DO_eY -Arrestar a Putin equivaldría a "declarar la guerra" a Rusia, advierte Medvédev | AFP https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWrDw9hRb5k -GUERRA UCRANIA: El AVANCE RUSO se ESTANCA en BAJMUT mientras los ATAQUES a CIVILES CONTINÚAN | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8T_mYvZORA -GUERRA UCRANIA: RUSIA busca NUEVOS SOLDADOS con una gran CAMPAÑA PUBLICITARIA | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SG3orrbanP4&t=5s -Jefe de Wagner reconoce que 10.000 presidiarios rusos cayeron en Bajmut (canal26) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTVgzjjQXLc -GUERRA UCRANIA: RUSIA recluta SOLDADOS ampliando la EDAD de MOVILIZACIÓN y captando a PRESOS | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGSNZElpSaY -“Putin es un necio”, dicen soldados rusos en llamadas interceptadas https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KOBZCGuQVg -Ucrania | El jefe del Grupo Wagner reconoce 20 000 muertos en Bajmut. Euronews. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yn3ApOYwt5M -Ucrania confirma que Rusia se ha hecho con el control de Soledar (El debate) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yT-_57HdTwo -Por qué RUSIA tiene tanto interés en capturar SOLEDAR Y BAJMUT. Diario Gestión https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=alP7uOjPJV8&t=108s -GUERRA UCRANIA: Un EXCOMANDANTE RUSO del GRUPO WAGNER HUYE a NORUEGA para SALVAR la VIDA | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOqUAzwxj14 -Ramzan Kadyrov: el dictador que pone a sus ciudadanos a escribirle poemas a Vladimir Putin. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEnXlS3e0Vw -Kadyrov se ofrece en Grozni un cumpleaños digno de un marajá. Euronews. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMa_EH06DsA -Ramzan Kadyrov, en la lista negra de Estados Unidos. Euronews. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YI31Y4tke9w -Soldados chechenos luchan en Ucrania. DW. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFuV284lBD4 -Putin inaugura el puente que une Crimea con Rusia al volante de un camión. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4jAVjghEFM -Destruye parte de puente de Crimea, la joya de Putin. El universal. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRhLYjUGtus -Detienen a dos sospechosos del asesinato del opositor ruso Boris Nemtsov. EFE. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bN3wp1VR7n0 -Putin probablemente autorizó el asesinato de Litvinenko. E. Press. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpBaJrIVPEw -Rusos acusados por el envenenamiento del espía Skripal. El País. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIGuvh0Mo9g -La policía investiga el caso Skripal. DW. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vdxsrw_Z-0w -El opositor Nemtsov asesinado a tiros en Moscú. DW. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-oIvYXeQl2o -Alexéi Navalny, opositor ruso presuntamente envenenado. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-q6mO7s0tug -RUSIA: Las EXTRAÑAS CIRCUNSTANCIAS en las que han MUERTO 9 OLIGARCAS relacionados con PUTIN | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y2PHwnQ4VOk Musica: -Bernard Herrmann - (Soundtrack) Película "Con la muerte en los talones" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4oi0XRM0RQ -Aleksandrov Red Army Choir - Тачанка (Tachanka) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFJFeeHLp5E -Балалайка Balalaika Osipov Russian Folk Orchestra 2016 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFq-6A3lEsY -MARRY ME, BELLAMY - ЛУЧШАЯ ПОДРУГА (Mejor Amigo) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jspYeuWexzU -Música de violín https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjxMWlUDbBU -Marry Me Bellamy Конфетка Konfetka РУССКИЙ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDLVzxZ2Ihs -MARRY ME BELLAMY ДЖЕДИ ПЛЕННИЦА https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Huehi4LM-9M -Eduard Khil - Ballad of a Soldier. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIwxynwUxLA -El Lago de los Cisnes (Ballet de Moscú) Swan Lake- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=km3XRd3r7to - Polyushka Polye (Полюшко Поле) - Accordion https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-fXtwtXsvs -ORİGA -POLYUSHKA POLYE. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04_rDXjQuoQ Redes Sociales: -Twitter: LABIBLIOTECADE3 -Facebook: Gerión De Contestania Muchísimas gracias por escuchar LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA y hasta la semana que viene. Podcast amigos: La Biblioteca Perdida: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-podcast-la-biblioteca-perdida_sq_f171036_1.html Cliophilos: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-cliophilos-paseo-historia_sq_f1487551_1.html Niebla de Guerra: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-niebla-guerra_sq_f1608912_1.html Casus Belli: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-casus-belli-podcast_sq_f1391278_1.html Victoria Podcast: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-victoria-podcast_sq_f1781831_1.html BELLUMARTIS: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-bellumartis-podcast_sq_f1618669_1.html Relatos Salvajes: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-relatos-salvajes_sq_f1470115_1.html Motor y al Aire: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-motor-al-aire_sq_f1117313_1.html Pasaporte Historia: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-pasaporte-historia_sq_f1835476_1.html Cita con Rama Podcast: https://www.ivoox.com/cita-rama-podcast-ciencia-ficcion_sq_f11043138_1.html Sierra Delta: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-sierra-delta_sq_f1507669_1.html Permiso para Clave: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-permiso-para-clave_sq_f1909797_1.html Héroes de Guerra 2.0: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-heroes-guerra_sq_f1256035_1.html Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals

C ce soir
Témoignage : elle a dit non à la guerre

C ce soir

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 68:21


3 semaines après le début de la guerre en Ukraine, Marina OVSIANNIKOVA brandissait une pancarte hostile au Kremlin sur la première chaîne du pays… et un peu plus d'un an après ce coup d'éclat elle sera avec nous sur ce plateau… Que reste-t-il de ce geste aujourd'hui en Russie ? De quoi cette femme est-elle le symbole ? Y'a t il quelque chose à attendre de l'opposition russe à Vladimir POUTINE ? On en débat avec : Marina OVSIANNIKOVA, Journaliste, productrice, dissidente russe, autrice de “No war” aux éditions de l'Archipel (04/05/2023) Christophe DELOIRE, Secrétaire général de Reporters sans frontières (RSF) Antoine ARJAKOVSKY, Historien, directeur de recherche au Collège des Bernardins, co-auteur de « Goodbye Poutine » aux éditions Ginkgo (08/03/2023) Andreï KOZOVOÏ,,Historien, professeur d'histoire russe et soviétique à l'université de Lille, auteur de « Égéries rouges » aux éditions Perrin (13/04/2023) Elena VOLOCHINE, Journaliste, ancienne correspondante de France 24 en Russie Vera GRANTSEVA, Politologue, enseignante à Sciences Po Le choix de Camille Diao : Le documentaire "My friend Boris Nemtsov", sur la plateforme Tenk

Européen de la semaine
Vladimir Kara-Mourza, premier opposant condamné en Russie pour haute trahison

Européen de la semaine

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2023 3:33


Ce lundi 17 avril, Vladimir Kara-Mourza va connaître la peine que va lui infliger la justice russe après ce que l'on peut qualifier de parodie de procès. Le parquet russe réclame vingt-cinq ans de prison pour cet opposant notoire, poursuivi pour haute trahison, diffusion de fausses informations sur l'armée russe et également pour travail illégal pour une organisation qualifiée d'indésirable. Vladimir Kara-Mourza, qui a déjà été empoisonné à deux reprises en 2015 et 2017, des tentatives d'assassinats qui sont attribuées au pouvoir russe, fait face à une justice russe qui démontre depuis des mois, même des années, que l'État de droit n'existe plus en Russie. Depuis le début de l'offensive russe en Ukraine, peu sont ceux qui osent encore braver les interdits et crier haut et fort leur rejet d'une guerre injustifiée. Vladimir Kara-Mourza en fait partie. Ce jeune opposant de quarante et un ans, père de trois enfants, est resté en Russie après le déclenchement de l'offensive, malgré les risques que cela impliquaient, et ce, alors que sa femme et ses enfants vivent aux États-Unis.Marie Mendras, politologue au CNRS et professeur à Sciences Po Paris, explique pourquoi cet ancien journaliste, a souhaité continuer à mener son combat dans son pays malgré les menaces : « Comme il le raconte lui-même, il a été fasciné par le travail politique que menait Boris Nemtsov. Boris Nemtsov était vice-Premier ministre de Boris Eltsine dans les années 1990 et dès l'arrivée au pouvoir de Vladimir Poutine en 1999, Nemtsov a été l'un des rares à comprendre que l'ère qui s'ouvrait serait une ère dangereuse pour la démocratie et les libertés. Et en février 2015, quand Boris Nemtsov a été assassiné sur le pont qui mène au Kremlin, Kara-Mourza a décidé de consacrer toute sa vie, son énergie, toutes ses capacités à combattre ceux qui avaient fait tuer Nemtsov et un régime qu'il considérait déjà à l'époque comme une dictature et un régime criminel. »Le premier opposant condamné pour haute trahisonVladimir Kara-Mourza, qui a joué un rôle clef dans l'adoption en 2012 aux États-Unis de la loi Magnitski, une loi qui sanctionnait les fonctionnaires russes responsables de la mort en prison en 2009 de l'avocat Sergueï Magnitski et qui depuis a été élargie aux oligarques et responsables russes coupables de violation de droits de l'homme, est considéré comme un ennemi par le régime de Vladimir Poutine. Et après avoir critiqué les autorités russes et l'armée suite au déclenchement de l'invasion en Ukraine, le Kremlin a semble-t-il décidé de s'acharner contre lui, comme le détaille Gilles Favarel-Garrigues, directeur de recherche au CNRS (et auteur du livre « La verticale de la peur : ordres et allégeances en Russie sous Poutine) : « Vladimir Kara-Mourza est un bouc émissaire fabriqué par le pouvoir pour accréditer l'idée selon laquelle il y a une alliance entre des ennemis extérieurs et intérieurs qui veulent déstabiliser le régime. Ce n'est pas le premier à en faire les frais. Quelqu'un comme Ilia Iachin, un autre opposant du même âge, a déjà été condamné il y a quelques mois. Mais c'est en tout cas avec une sévérité inédite que Vladimir Kara-Mourza va être condamné demain. »Celui que l'on surnomme parfois « l'opposant numéro 2 », après Alexeï Navalny, pourrait bien être ce lundi le premier opposant à être condamné pour haute trahison. Le parquet russe réclame vingt-cinq ans de prison. Et malgré ce que cette peine implique, Vladimir Kara-Mourza n'en démord pas et se dit fier de son engagement, ce qui n'étonne pas Gilles Favarel-Garrigues : « C'est quelqu'un qui a toujours fait face aux épreuves qu'il a subies. C'est quelqu'un qui a subi des tentatives d'empoisonnement, dont la santé s'est dégradée. C'est quelqu'un qui a fait l'objet de nombreuses persécutions et de nombreuses poursuites judiciaires en Russie, donc je pense qu'on est là face à des opposants qui n'ont plus rien à perdre. Il fait penser à ce niveau-là à Alexeï Navalny. Il subit la dictature de la loi comme on dit en Russie, à plein régime. C'est un choix qui vise sans doute à forger aussi une image de détermination par rapport au pouvoir russe. Mais on ne peut que s'inquiéter pour ces opposants et pour le fait qu'ils puissent terminer leur vie en prison. »Un homme qui fait peur au KremlinLa santé de Vladimir Kara-Mourza inquiète. Et dans un pays avec un régime que beaucoup qualifie de totalitaire, celui à qui le Conseil de l'Europe a décerné en 2022 le prix Vaclav-Havel des droits de l'homme pourrait bien subir des conditions de détention inhumaine. Car comme l'explique Marie Mendras, les autorités le craignent : « Pourquoi est-ce que Vladimir Poutine et ses services de renseignements ont décidé de se rassurer en se disant qu'ils peuvent écraser Vladimir Kara-Mourza et le laisser mourir dans un camp à régime sévère ? Eh bien, c'est parce que cet homme leur fait peur. »Vladimir Kara-Mourza devrait connaître la peine de prison qui l'attend ce lundi 17 avril, et malgré les conséquences, il continuera de croire en avenir meilleur pour son pays, un avenir sans Vladimir Poutine.

Européen de la semaine
L'opposant russe Ilya Iachine, emprisonné pour avoir dénoncé des meurtres de civils

Européen de la semaine

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2022 3:32


Huit ans et demi de prison pour avoir critiqué la guerre en Ukraine : le jeune opposant russe Ilia Iachine a été condamné, la semaine dernière par un tribunal de Moscou pour avoir diffusé de « fausses informations ». Son procès en appel, dont l'issue ne fait guère de doute, ne devait pas se tenir avant les mois de janvier ou février, selon ses avocats. Portrait de l'un des derniers grands opposants au Kremlin. À l'énoncé du verdict, il ne s'est pas départi de son sourire et a conservé son sens de l'humour. « Les gars, ne soyez pas contrariés, tout va bien. Si quelqu'un pense que Poutine va encore gouverner pendant huit ans, il est très optimiste », a lancé Ilya Iachine, en col roulé beige, menotté, dans sa cage de verre du tribunal moscovite, qui venait de la condamner à une lourde peine de prison. L'opposant était jugé pour avoir dénoncé, sur sa chaine YouTube, « le meurtre de civils » dans la ville ukrainienne de Boutcha, près de Kiev, où l'armée russe a été accusée d'exactions, ce que Moscou refuse de reconnaitre. Ilya Iachine était poursuivi sur la base d'articles du Code pénal introduits peu après le début de l'offensive russe en Ukraine, qui punissent ceux qui « discréditent » l'armée russe ou « publient de fausses informations » sur ses agissements. Même privé de liberté depuis fin juin, il a continué de critiquer les autorités de façon acerbe et de dénoncer la guerre. Il a, à maintes reprises, expliquées son refus de fuir la Russie : « j'aime mon pays et je suis prêt à sacrifier ma liberté pour vivre ici [...]. Je suis un patriote », avait-il lancé lors de son procès. « Il a toujours considéré qu'en émigrant, il ne pourrait pas continuer à militer de manière efficace dans l'opposition. Il estimait qu'il fallait continuer à travailler uniquement en Russie, quel qu'en soit le prix payé », raconte Vladimir Milov, opposant en exil, ancien vice-ministre de l'Énergie. Ami avec Ilya Iachine depuis plus de quinze ans, il affirme avoir plus d'une fois débattu du sujet avec lui, « mais c'était son point de vue et il est digne de respect », conclut-il, une pointe de regret dans la voix. Le politologue indépendant, Dmitri Orechkine, qui s'est exilé à Riga, est tout aussi circonspect face à cette décision de rester en Russie envers et contre tous. « Ilya Iachine a échangé sa liberté contre environ un à deux mois d'intérêt public envers sa personne, ensuite, cet intérêt s'éteindra », soutient l'expert, citant le cas d'Alexei Navalny, condamné, lui aussi, à une lourde peine de prison. « De l'étranger, il aurait apporté plus de problèmes à la verticale du pouvoir de Poutine qu'emprisonné en Russie et je pense que ça aurait été aussi le cas pour Ilya Iachine », estime Dmitri Orechkine. À 39 ans, l'opposant a déjà derrière lui une longue carrière politique. Actif depuis le tout début des années 2000 au sein du mouvement de jeunesse du parti d'opposition Iabloko de Grigori Iavlinsky, avant d'en être exclu en 2008, il a été le compagnon de route de Boris Nemtsov, assassiné en 2015. « Il a coopéré avec Grigori Iavlinsky, avec Alexei Navalny, avec Boris Nemtsov, mais il avait ses propres ambitions politiques et depuis au moins cinq ans, il avait pris son envol », explique Dmitri Orechkine. « Il a lancé son programme politique, il a remporté une élection et il avait depuis son propre électorat. J'ai le sentiment qu'il était un acteur politique indépendant ». Élu municipal En 2017, il parvient à se faire élire au conseil d'un quartier de Moscou. Deux ans plus tard, il vise un échelon plus haut, mais sa candidature au parlement local de Moscou est invalidée comme celle de 26 autres opposants, dont Vladimir Milov. Ce dernier se souvient de la campagne de parrainages préalable à l'enregistrement des candidats, organisée dans un lieu qui regroupait plusieurs de ces candidats au centre de Moscou : « les gens qui venaient apporter leurs parrainages étaient environ dix fois plus nombreux pour Ilya Iachine que pour les autres candidats. Il y avait une file d'attente impressionnante devant son bureau. Il était déjà devenu un homme politique très connu ». Pour l'opposant en exil, il ne fait aucun doute qu'Ilya Iachine aurait fait un concurrent sérieux pour le maire de la capitale Serguei Sobianine, s'il n'avait pas été écarté de l'élection municipale de 2018. « C'est une personnalité très brillante, un homme de principe, honnête, un politicien né, qui sait parler aux gens. Il a un instinct politique très fort. Et je suis persuadé qu'il aura un grand avenir, qu'il finira par sortir de prison, et qu'il jouera un grand rôle dans l'histoire de la Russie. C'est quelqu'un qui n'a pas peur de toujours dire la vérité », raconte son collègue. Ilya Iachine est aussi l'une des victimes préférées des médias pro-Kremlin, qui n'hésitent pas à s'attaquer à sa famille. Il se fait aussi piéger au lit avec deux femmes, mais la vidéo ne fait surface que dix ans plus tard, envoyée à la fiancée de l'opposant. « Discréditer un jeune homme de 24 ans parce qu'il est avec deux filles, même dans un pays aussi conservateur que le nôtre, c'est assez difficile, vous en conviendrez », avait dit Ilya Iachine dans une vidéo sur sa chaine YouTube consacrée à ce sujet, qu'il avait intitulée : « Les jeunes femmes du FSB : l'arme secrète de Poutine ». À cette même époque, l'opposant était tombé dans un guet-apens : lors d'un contrôle routier, il avait proposé de l'argent pour éviter une amende. La scène avait été filmée. D'autres personnalités avaient été piégées de la sorte, comme Dmitri Orechkine. « Il m'a appelé après cette affaire, il était très choqué », se souvient le politologue. « Il attendait du réconfort de ma part, il était encore très jeune. Il trouvait que c'était répugnant de recourir à de telles méthodes ». Plus d'une décennie après ces affaires, le jeune politicien a bien mûri : « désormais, il a la peau aussi dure que celle d'un rhinocéros. Son avocate a dit qu'elle n'avait jamais rencontré de prévenu aussi calme qui savait parfaitement comment tout cela allait se terminer. Il avait réfléchi à tout et il avait conscience de ce qui l'attendait », raconte Dmitri Orechkine. Soigner ses caries avant la prison L'opposant qui critiquait ouvertement la guerre menée par la Russie en Ukraine, savait qu'il risquait gros. Mais, en homme sérieux et prévoyant, il se préparait à la prison, moralement et physiquement, comme il l'a raconté, en juin, sur la chaine du journaliste et blogueur populaire Iouri Doud quelques jours avant son arrestation : « dès que les premiers missiles ont été envoyés sur l'Ukraine, je suis allé chez le dentiste et j'ai fait réparer toute ma mâchoire, je me suis fait soigner des caries, on m'a mis des plombages, parce que je savais qu'en prison, personne ne me soignerait les dents », raconte Ilya Iachine.  Dans un message publié cette semaine sur Facebook, l'opposant s'adresse à ses soutiens : « ils voulaient m'écraser moralement avec un jugement féroce. Ils ont fait un calcul : je ne me suis jamais senti aussi fort qu'aujourd'hui. Et je n'ai jamais été aussi sûr que tout finira pas aller bien », écrit-il, appelant ses amis à « garder la foi en un avenir meilleur ». ► À lire aussi : L'opposant russe Ilia Iachine lourdement condamné pour avoir dénoncé l'offensive en Ukraine

Subjektiivinen Todistaja
Jakso 19: Poliittinen murha Venäjällä

Subjektiivinen Todistaja

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 70:51


Galina Starovoitova, Paul Klebnikov, Anna Politkovskaja, Alexander Litvinenko, Boris Berezovski ja Boris Nemtsov. Siinä vain muutama liian aikaiseen hautaan joutunut Putinin hallinnon vastustaja. Tämä on heidän tarina.Instagram: subjektiivinentodistajaYouTube: Subjektiivinen TodistajaGmail: subjektiivinentodistaja@gmail.com

Diplomates - A Geopolitical Chinwag
Russia without Putin? Ukraine, War Crimes, and Political Resistance

Diplomates - A Geopolitical Chinwag

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 54:57


Evgenia Kara-Murza, is a Russian dissident and campaigner for democratic change in Russia.    Evgenia is the wife of Vladimir Kara-Murza, a Russian politician, author, and historian who is currently jailed in Russia as a political prisoner of Vladimir Putin having previously survived two assasination attempts. Kara-Murza played a key role in the establishment of Magnitsky laws around the world and has been a long time opponent of Putin's regime.   Evgenia is the advocacy coordinator for the Free Russia Foundation, which seeks to give a voice to those repressed by the current Russian government and informs the world about the situation in Russia.   Misha Zelinksy caught up with Evgenia to discuss Russia's war in Ukraine, Russian war crimes and who must pay, why the West indulged Putin for too long, how Putin has crushed Russian political opposition, why Ukraine must win, and what a post Putin Russia might look like one day.   You can follow Evgenia and Vladimir here: @ekaramurza and @vkaramurza   You can follow Misha Zelinsky who is reporting on the war for the Australian Financial Review from inside Ukraine here: @mishazelinsky     About Vladimir Kara-Murza   A longtime colleague of opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, he has served as deputy leader of the People's Freedom Party and was a candidate for the Russian Parliament. Kara-Murza played a key role in the passage of “Magnitsky laws” in countries around the world – including the UK, the U.S., and Canada – that imposed personal sanctions on Russian officials involved in human rights abuses.  Twice, in 2015 and 2017, he was targeted for assassination by poisoning by operatives of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) who were later identified in a media investigation by Bellingcat, The Insider, and Der Spiegel. In April 2022 Kara-Murza was arrested and has since been imprisoned in Moscow for his public opposition to Vladimir Putin's war on Ukraine.  He has been designated as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International. Kara-Murza is the author or contributor of several books and documentaries on Russian politics and history. He has worked as a journalist for Russian and Western media organizations, including Kommersant, Echo of Moscow, and the BBC; and writes a regular column for The Washington Post. He is a recipient of a number of international prizes, including the Geneva Summit Courage Award, the Sakharov Prize for Journalism as an Act of Conscience, and the Magnitsky Human Rights Award. He holds an M.A. (Cantab.) in History from Cambridge.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Amanpour
What to expect from new UK PM Liz Truss

Amanpour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022 54:55


It's official: Liz Truss will become the UK's next prime minister. Two months after Boris Johnson announced he would be leaving his post, the country's foreign secretary took 57% of Conservative Party members' votes, beating her rival Rishi Sunak by a smaller margin than expected. What can the UK and the world expect from a Prime Minister Truss? Veteran British journalist Andrew Neil joins the show to discuss.  Also on today's show: Journalist Zhanna Nemtsova, daughter of slain Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov; Carlo Rovelli, physicist and author; David Robinson, son of Jackie Robinson, baseball's first Black player.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

Another Russia
A Mountain Of Flowers

Another Russia

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 34:20


Zhanna recounts the night of her father's assassination. In the days following, there is a massive memorial march through the center of Moscow and Boris Nemtsov becomes a symbol of opposition to Putin. Years later, Zhanna reflects on what her father's story means for Russia today. If you want to learn more about the stories of Russians who are standing up to autocracy and how you can help support their work, check out https://nemtsovfund.org/en/RussiansForChange/

Here Be Monsters
HBM155: Ghosts Aliens Burritos

Here Be Monsters

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 32:16


Content Note: pervasive language, brief mentions of bigotry.Alex Greenfield says that there was no such thing as a normal day when he was a kid. His dad (Allen H Greenfield) self describes as a “researcher in the shadow world.” And his mom soon grew tired of her husband's lifestyle, which included a lot of time on the road: chasing rumors of cryptids, ghosts, and aliens. But after his parents split up, Alex, his dad, and an ever changing cast of motorcycle gang members and step-moms kept seeking the occult. Some of the topics discussed in this episode: St. Simons Island in Georgia (and reported hauntings), The Okefenokee Swamp (and the ignition of swamp gas), The Three Mile Island Nuclear Accident (and subsequent protests), Mono Lake in California (and the UFO sightings there), and a movie called Being There (wherein the character played by Peter Sellers appears to walk on water).Alex Greenfield is the writer of The Sand, 10.0 Earthquake, and other movies. He also used to be the head writer for WWE Smackdown. Alex's dad, Allen H Greenfield (aka. T Allen Greenfield), is a UFOlogist and occultist. He is the author of Secret Cipher of the UFOnauts, The Story Of The Hermetic Brotherhood Of Light, and other books. Unrelated to this episode, but do give a listen to the limited series that Jeff's been mixing for Crooked Media. It's called Another Russia, and it's about the assassination of Russian dissident Boris Nemtsov, as told by Ben Rhodes and Zhanna Nemtsova. Available now on every podcast app. Also, Jeff's headed back to Berlin, Germany for about a month. If you know any good stories/interviews he should record while he's there, send a DM on Twitter or Instagram, or use the contact form.Here Be Monsters is an independent podcast supported by listeners and sponsors. Producer: Jeff EmtmanMusic: The Black Spot, Circling Lights, August FriisSponsor: is / ought books is / ought books is a publisher of spiral bound self help manuals, art books, and non literary works on paper.All titles from is / ought books are available to buy online via the link below. is / ought books are also distributed via Small Press Distribution (SPD).Thank you is / ought books for sponsoring Here Be Monsters.

Here Be Monsters
HBM155: Ghosts Aliens Burritos

Here Be Monsters

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 32:16


Content Note: pervasive language, brief mentions of bigotry.Alex Greenfield says that there was no such thing as a normal day when he was a kid. His dad (Allen H Greenfield) self describes as a “researcher in the shadow world.” And his mom soon grew tired of her husband's lifestyle, which included a lot of time on the road: chasing rumors of cryptids, ghosts, and aliens. But after his parents split up, Alex, his dad, and an ever changing cast of motorcycle gang members and step-moms kept seeking the occult. Some of the topics discussed in this episode: St. Simons Island in Georgia (and reported hauntings), The Okefenokee Swamp (and the ignition of swamp gas), The Three Mile Island Nuclear Accident (and subsequent protests), Mono Lake in California (and the UFO sightings there), and a movie called Being There (wherein the character played by Peter Sellers appears to walk on water).Alex Greenfield is the writer of The Sand, 10.0 Earthquake, and other movies. He also used to be the head writer for WWE Smackdown. Alex's dad, Allen H Greenfield (aka. T Allen Greenfield), is a UFOlogist and occultist. He is the author of Secret Cipher of the UFOnauts, The Story Of The Hermetic Brotherhood Of Light, and other books. Unrelated to this episode, but do give a listen to the limited series that Jeff's been mixing for Crooked Media. It's called Another Russia, and it's about the assassination of Russian dissident Boris Nemtsov, as told by Ben Rhodes and Zhanna Nemtsova. Available now on every podcast app. Also, Jeff's headed back to Berlin, Germany for about a month. If you know any good stories/interviews he should record while he's there, send a DM on Twitter or Instagram, or use the contact form.Here Be Monsters is an independent podcast supported by listeners and sponsors. Producer: Jeff EmtmanMusic: The Black Spot, Circling Lights, August FriisSponsor: is / ought books is / ought books is a publisher of spiral bound self help manuals, art books, and non literary works on paper.All titles from is / ought books are available to buy online via the link below. is / ought books are also distributed via Small Press Distribution (SPD).Thank you is / ought books for sponsoring Here Be Monsters.

Dubious
Mini Dubisode: The Car Bomb Assassination of Darya Dugina - Who Ordered The Hit?

Dubious

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 22:15


After the Toyota Land Cruiser Daria Dugina was driving exploded on a road 20 miles west of Moscow and burst into flames, Russia has opened a murder investigation into her assassination.According to TASS, When Dugina "turned onto the Mozhaiskoye road near the village of Bolshiye Vyazemi, there was an explosion, the car caught fire immediately. Forensic experts, investigators and experts in explosive engineering are inspecting the scene and they have found or concluded that approximately 400 grams of TNT were used to cause the explosion. If you like our content please become a patron to get our premium episodes and our public episodes ad-free. 1 Daria's father is Alexander Dugin, a right wing extremist and ultranationalist, is the figure who “inspired” and advised Putin to invade Ukraine. He helped lay the ideological foundation for Putin's invasion of Ukraine and is referred to as “Putin's brain” or “the architect of the Ukraine invasion”. He allegedly is Putin's spiritual advisor, based on his roots in the orthodox church. 2 Darya Dugina's father invented the concept of Eurasianism – a new flavor of fascism. He is to Putin what Steve Bannon / Alex Jones is to Trump. In March 2022, the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned Daria Dugina for her contribution to an article on the United World International website suggesting that Ukraine would "perish" if it is admitted to NATO. Dugina was UWI's chief editor. She also claimed that the atrocities of Bucha were American propaganda, chosen because of the phonological similarity to "butcher," a word she linked to US President Biden calling Putin a "butcher" earlier in March. 3 We are considering three theories regarding who's behind the assassination of Darya Dugina, based on one simple question: who stands to gain from her death? Ukraine did it – we explain why that is not the case, in fact this is the last thing Ukraine would do An inside Russian opposition faction did it to destabilize Putin's regime and cause unrest – this theory doesn't hold water either in our opinion. Putin's FSB did it, on his orders as he did with the Moscow apartment bombings, the Moscow theater hostage crisis, Litvinenko, Boris Nemtsov and Anna Politkovskaya. What would Putin stand to gain? Re-energizing popular support for his continued invasion of Ukraine A pretext to escalate tragedies in Ukraine A pretext to justify those war crimes and attacks, as being payback or a response to this assassination – to his people and to the western leaders, United Nations etc Creating a martyr, a new symbol to galvanize the troops An opportunity for him to make some strong worded statements, to come out as a powerful, strong leader who has to double down on killing Ukrainians to keep his own people safe Lastly, a great opportunity to use the grieving father, Aleksandr Dugin, the architect of the war in Ukraine, as a megaphone for his propaganda serving his political goals. Episode #DubiMeter 9.5 1. Russia Opens Murder Investigation After Blast Kills Daughter of Putin Ally. New York Times. August 2022. ⇤2. Mohammed Tawfeeq, Josh Pennington, Jonny Hallam and Tara John. Car bomb kills daughter of 'spiritual guide' to Putin's Ukraine invasion. CNN. August 2022. ⇤3. Annabelle Timsit and Rachel Pannett. A Putin ally's daughter was killed near Russia's capital. Washington Post. August 2022. ⇤

Another Russia
March of the Millions

Another Russia

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2022 32:42


As Putin tightens his grip on the Kremlin, Boris Nemtsov tries to build an opposition movement. He joins forces with a young and tenacious leader named Alexei Navalny. Their alliance culminates in the biggest protest Russia has seen since the days of the Soviet Union. It also sparks a brutal crackdown.If you want to learn more about the stories of Russians who are standing up to autocracy and how you can help support their work, check out https://nemtsovfund.org/en/RussiansForChange/

Another Russia
A Cat In A Sack

Another Russia

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2022 32:33


The oligarchs install Vladimir Putin to replace Yeltsin as the president. But it soon becomes clear Putin has no interest in being the lapdog of the rich and powerful. Boris Nemtsov goes into opposition and starts to face the consequences. If you want to learn more about the stories of Russians who are standing up to autocracy and how you can help support their work, check out https://nemtsovfund.org/en/RussiansForChange/

Pod Save the World
Introducing: Another Russia

Pod Save the World

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 37:03


In 2015 Putin's number one public enemy, Boris Nemtsov, was shot and killed in front of the Kremlin. He was a relentless critic of Putin, corruption, and war in Ukraine. Then, he was assassinated. His daughter, journalist Zhanna Nemtsova, and co-host Ben Rhodes tell his story to find out what happened to an entire country – and what happens next. Is another Russia possible? Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/another-russia/id1634279839 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1edslXTCkkMFeN8htn1iAy?si=1G14a5slQ-uURxuxsTmbpA Crooked: https://crooked.com/podcast-series/another-russia/

Podcast: The Week Ahead In Russia - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Boris Nemtsov And Another Russia - August 01, 2022

Podcast: The Week Ahead In Russia - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 37:39


Boris Nemtsov, a politician with presidential potential who became a vocal opponent of Vladimir Putin and Moscow's aggression against Ukraine, was shot dead near the Kremlin in 2015. His daughter, journalist Zhanna Nemtsova, talks about Another Russia, her new podcast about Nemtsov and the continuing fight for the country's future.

The Russia File
The Successor: The Story of Boris Nemtsov and the Country Where He Didn't Become President - Part 2

The Russia File

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022 26:34


The story of Boris Nemtsov, Russia's prominent opposition politician assassinated in 2015, is deeply intertwined with pivotal moments of contemporary Russian history. It is also strikingly relevant today, as the world grapples with Vladimir Putin's disastrous war in Ukraine and Russia's dramatic loss of freedom. In Part 2 of our conversation with journalist Mikhail Fishman, we discuss Nemtsov's relationship with Putin, the roots of Putin's obsession with Ukraine, and Nemtsov's legacy. Find more information and show notes here: https://www.wilsoncenter.org/audio/successor-story-boris-nemtsov-and-country-where-he-didnt-become-president-part-2

The Russia File
The Successor: The Story of Boris Nemtsov and the Country Where He Didn't Become President - Part 1

The Russia File

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 31:43


The story of Boris Nemtsov, Russia's prominent opposition politician assassinated in 2015, is deeply intertwined with pivotal moments of contemporary Russian history. It is also strikingly relevant today, as the world grapples with Vladimir Putin's disastrous war in Ukraine and Russia's dramatic loss of freedom. We discuss it with the journalist Mikhail Fishman, author of The Successor: The Story of Boris Nemtsov and the Country Where He Didn't Become President. Find more information and show notes here: https://www.wilsoncenter.org/audio/successor-story-boris-nemtsov-and-country-where-he-didnt-become-president-part-1

Another Russia
Another Russia coming July 25th

Another Russia

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 3:00


In 2015 Putin's number one public enemy, Boris Nemtsov, was shot and killed in front of the Kremlin. He was a relentless critic of Putin, corruption, and war in Ukraine. Then, he was assassinated. His daughter, journalist Zhanna Nemtsova, and co-host Ben Rhodes tell his story to find out what happened to an entire country – and what happens next. Is another Russia possible?

Don't Show My Face
Big Mistake Part 7: A Physicist is Murdered in Moscow

Don't Show My Face

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2022 37:50


Is it just a coincidence that one of Gazprom's most ardent critics was murdered near the Kremlin in 2015? That's the story we're looking at in this part of the Big Mistake series: the life and murder of Boris Nemtsov. To become a subscriber, go to: https://anchor.fm/dont-show-my-face/subscribe Here are a few links to Nemtsov documentaries and further information: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vExk___aiv4&t=445s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vM04zNbsaJg https://zona.media/chronicle/nemtsov-chronicle#40008 Follow us on Instagram and Twitter: https://www.instagram.com/dontshowmyfacepodcast/ https://mobile.twitter.com/dsmfpodcast Original music for this episode by Husky Gawenda: https://open.spotify.com/track/0LLInysix3EBxWaBgTVqo1?si=ba4a7d3aba184807 Additional original music by Evan Lawrence. Our artwork is by a Ukrainian artist, Anna Moskalets: https://moskaletsanna234.wixsite.com/my-site This episode was produced by James Reed. Don't Show My Face is a production of Invisible Pictures Germany, 2022.

Intelligence Squared
Putin's Politics, with Zhanna Nemtsova and Ben Noble

Intelligence Squared

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 47:30


Since the war in Ukraine began, dwindling remaining hopes of maintaining even the outward appearance of a free democratic process in Russia have been all but eliminated by the Kremlin regime. Joining us on the programme to discuss the dangerous game of voicing dissent in Russia is activist and journalist Zhanna Nemtsova, daughter of murdered Russian politician Boris Nemtsov, and Ben Noble, Associate Professor of Russian Politics at University College London and author of Navalny: Putin's Nemesis, Russia's Future? Hosting the discussion is Polina Ivanova, correspondent for the Financial Times covering Russia and Ukraine. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Global News Podcast
Ukraine outlines priorities for talks with Russia

Global News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 31:26


President Zelensky has said he's prepared to discuss adopting a neutral status. The next round of face-to-face negotiations between Ukraine and Russia take place this week in Turkey. Also: an investigation has found that the Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov was shadowed by a government agent for almost a year before he was shot dead in Moscow in 2015, and drama at the Oscars after Will Smith takes exception to a comment about his wife's hairstyle.

TRENDIFIER with Julian Dorey
#92 - The Only Reporter Putin BANNED From Russia | David Satter

TRENDIFIER with Julian Dorey

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2022 189:04


(***TIMESTAMPS in description below) ~ David Satter is a journalist, author, historian, and foreign policy expert –– who is widely regarded as one of the world's preeminent experts on Vladimir Putin / Russia. In December 2013, after years of exclusive reporting on Putin's crimes against humanity, David became the first Western Journalist ever banned from Russia (by their government) in the post-Cold War era.    From 1976 until his banishment in 2013, David spent the majority of his time living in the Soviet Union (which later became Russia) while working as the Moscow Correspondent for the Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal. He is perhaps best known as the first researcher who claimed that Vladimir Putin and Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) were behind the 1999 Russian Apartment Bombings, the 2002 Nord-Ost Siege, and the 2004 Beslan School Attack.   Over the past 2 decades, David has authored 5 books on Russia / The Soviet Union. Furthermore, he is also a Senior Fellow at both the Foreign Policy Research Institute & The Hudson Institute –– as well as a Visiting Scholar at Johns Hopkins. ***TIMESTAMPS*** 0:00 - Intro; The story behind Putin's government banning David from Russia in 2013; David's backstory working as a Moscow correspondent; Recounting the fallout of post-Soviet Russia 16:19 - David was the first reporter to blow the whistle on Putin; the 1999 Russian Apartment Bombings; The Boris Yeltsin years in Russia; Chechnya Background and the First Chechen War; Putin's rise to the Russian Presidency 36:04 - David breaks down the timeline and full details of the 1999 Russian Apartment Bombings; “Soldiers Guarding Sugar”; The Chechen Dagestan Invasion Inside Job; Putin's popularity ratings post-bombing and 2000 Election; Does Putin look at himself as a Soviet?; David talks about his earliest suspicions on the bombing 59:13 - The brutal story behind the 2002 Nord-Ost Siege (Moscow Theater Hostage Crisis); The 2004 Beslan School Massacre; Putin to stay in power for life? 1:09:56 - What happened in Ukraine in 2014 (Maidan and Putin's annexation of Crimea); Malaysia Airlines Flight 17; Did David see the Ukraine Invasion coming?; Russian Government Murders: Boris Nemtsov, Alexander Litvinenko (in London), Ana Politkovskaya; Bill Browder's book, Red Notice 1:24:03 - Barack Obama's Reset Policy with Russia; David recalls a meeting he and Boris Nemtsov had with the Obama administration; What the US strategy towards Putin should be; The Julian Assange CIA report from Yahoo; The murder of Ana Politkovskaya's Chechen source 1:41:46 - David and Julian discuss the public comparisons between Putin and the most notorious leader of all time; Back to the Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 aftermath; The Ukraine Invasion's Effects on NATO; Many Russian people are victims of the regime 2:02:34 - Discussing the ominous calls in the media for a “No Fly Zone” in Ukraine (which could effectively cause WWIII); We need to find ways to get proper information to the Russian people 2:12:29 - David lays out the history of Propaganda in Russia; Analyzing the psychology of the Russian people; The opportunism practiced by men like Boris Yeltsin; Communism and Fascism are the same beasts w/ different faces 2:29:47 - The Endless Wars problem; The CIA and the Iraq WMD Controversy; How Intelligence Agencies operate; The disastrous Afghanistan pull out; Defeating ideologies 2:50:04 - Did Putin actually think Ukraine was about to join NATO?; The Russian Oligarch system; David's predictions on the Russia Ukraine War; David discusses Putin's mental state ~ YouTube EPISODES & CLIPS: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0A-v_DL-h76F75xik8h03Q ~ PRIVADO VPN FOR $4.99/Month: https://privadovpn.com/trendifier/#a_aid=Julian   Get $150 Off The Eight Sleep Pod Pro Mattress / Mattress Cover (USING CODE: "TRENDIFIER"): https://eight-sleep.ioym.net/trendifier Julian's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/julianddorey ~ Beat provided by: https://freebeats.io Music Produced by White Hot

The John Rothmann Show Podcast
John Rothmann  Russia is committing war crimes

The John Rothmann Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2022 35:53


Anatoly Chubais, a high-ranking Russian official who led the country's post-Soviet economic reforms, has resigned from his post and fled the country in opposition to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, news outlets reported Wednesday, making him the first high-level figure to officially distance himself from the Kremlin. Chubais, 66, and his spouse have fled to Istanbul, according to Russian media outlet RBC. Late last month, Chubais posted a photo of Boris Nemtsov, a leading Russian opposition figure murdered on a Moscow bridge in 2015, on social media, which was interpreted as a sign of opposition to the war, according to media reports. What do you think? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

MEDUZA/EN/VHF
‘It's not our war — it's Putin's war': What would Boris Nemtsov say about Russia's invasion of Ukraine? We don't have to wonder.

MEDUZA/EN/VHF

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2022 6:45


On February 27, 2015, politician Boris Nemtsov was murdered in the center of Moscow. In the final years of his life, he advocated against the military conflict in East Ukraine, vocally supported the 2014 Maidan Revolution, and frequently gave interviews with Ukrainian journalists. In the months leading up to his murder, Nemtsov was working on a report about Russian military intervention titled "Putin: War," which was posthumously published by his colleagues. To mark the anniversary of his murder, Meduza is publishing some of the anti-war statements Nemtsov made in the months leading up to his death. Original Article: https://meduza.io/en/feature/2022/02/28/it-s-not-our-war-it-s-putin-s-war

MEDUZA/EN/VHF
‘It's not our war — it's Putin's war': What would Boris Nemtsov say about Russia's invasion of Ukraine? We don't have to wonder.

MEDUZA/EN/VHF

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2022 1:04


On February 27, 2015, politician Boris Nemtsov was murdered in the center of Moscow. In the final years of his life, he advocated against the military conflict in East Ukraine, vocally supported the 2014 Maidan Revolution, and frequently gave interviews with Ukrainian journalists. In the months leading up to his murder, Nemtsov was working on a report about Russian military intervention titled "Putin: War," which was posthumously published by his colleagues. To mark the anniversary of his murder, Meduza is publishing some of the anti-war statements Nemtsov made in the months leading up to his death. Original Article: https://meduza.io/en/feature/2022/02/28/it-s-not-our-war-it-s-putin-s-war

Escuchando Documentales
Putin, de Espía a Presidente: 3- La Política de Putin #politica #biografia #documental #podcast

Escuchando Documentales

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 46:36


En este último capítulo veremos en los recientes movimientos de Vladimir Putin para "restablecer" la constitución rusa para que pueda gobernar, teóricamente, hasta al menos 2036, más tiempo que Stalin. Pero sí nos muestra algunos de sus otros movimientos para afianzar el poder, incluida la manipulación de votos en las elecciones parlamentarias que fue tan descarada que sus índices de aprobación cayeron en medio de protestas callejeras masivas. Encabezando las protestas estaba el líder de la oposición Boris Nemtsov, quien luego fue simplemente baleado en una calle cerca del Kremlin. En una secuencia escalofriante vemos cómo, cuando los dolientes dejaron flores en el sitio, se envió un helicóptero para que volara lo suficientemente bajo como para que fueran esparcidas por la corriente de aire de sus rotores. En estos días, se nos dice, el escenario mundial le interesa más a Putin que al ruso, y con varios "mini-Putin" instalados en todo el mundo, su legado parece seguro.

Simon and Sergei
Human Rights in Russia week-ending 11 March 2022 - with Evgenia Chirikova

Simon and Sergei

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 47:57


Our guest on the podcast this week is the Russian civil society activist, now living in Talinn, Estonia, Evgenia Chirikova. Evgenia Chirikova is especially well known for her campaign to save the Khimki Forest and she was leader of Ecological Defence (Ecoborona) in Moscow region. She was also a member of the organizing committee for Strategy 31 and a member of the Coordinating Council of the Russian Opposition. You can learn more about her work today at: activatica.org. The topics we discuss on the podcast include: the invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops, public opinion in Estonia, what the West is doing, what needs to be done to help, why things have come to this, the role of Vladimir Putin, prospects for the future. Our questions to Evgenia: 1) What does the public in Estonia think about the Russian invasion of Ukraine? 2) Boris Nemtsov was a great friend of Ukraine and was killed shortly after the annexation of Crimea. Do you think he imagined that would be such a full-scale invasion could occur? 3) How do you think Russian civic activists are doing? Many activists are leaving, laws are becoming more repressive. People are being detained and jailed. How do you assess the situation for Russian civil society? 4) Why do you think Putin decided to take this extraordinary step of invading a neighbouring country? 5) How is the West reacting? Are the EU and the U.S. doing enough? What is the impact of economic sanctions? 6) What should the general public in the West do? 7) How will Putin's regime change as a result of this war? Is there a possibility that the regime will not survive? 8) What do you think will happen in the coming days and weeks in Ukraine and Russia? 9) How do you see the future of human rights activism in Russia, what awaits the country and the world? This podcast is in Russian. You can also listen to the podcast on our website, SoundCloud, Spotify, iTunes, Google Podcasts, Anchor and YouTube. Sergei Nikitin writes on Facebook: “It pains me very much that right now some kind of universal evil is coming from Russia, from my homeland.” Russian civil society activist Evgenia Chirikova, who moved to Estonia several years ago, found an hour to talk with Simon Cosgrove and me. Zhenya says from Tallinn, where she now lives: “We need to help refugees, we need to do a lot of organisational work.” Zhenya told us that when asked "Who is to blame for this" her answer is that we tried to stop Putin with all our might. But we had a very weak civil society that had been decimated during the preceding decades of totalitarianism. "People of my generation - we were actually the first to try to organize movements, to resist unfair elections. But we also saw the cooperation of Western politicians with Putin, a kind of Schröderization of the West. They were feeding Putin." In our conversation Zhenya Chirikova recalled speeches she made in the European Parliament and in the British Parliament where she asked the Western countries not to buy oil and gas from Putin, not to support this corrupted regime. "People laughed at me, said it was real politik. It turns out that we raised this monster together with the West, and now we all have to clean it up together. We live in a new world, where Russia bans slogans like "No to War" and Germany rescues Ukrainians who have fled from Russian bombs. And people like Zhenya Chirikova in this new world continue to do what they have dedicated their lives to: fighting for justice and helping people.

Skullduggery
Special Operation and Peace (w/ Andrei Soshnikov & Maryan Zeblotzkyy)

Skullduggery

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 57:51


Journalist Andrei Soshnikoff, with the help of insider Lyudmila Savchuk, exposed the Internet Research Agency, a troll farm set up by a Russian Oligarch close to Putin. It was a new disturbing phenomenon in the global information wars. This was the moment American's came to know the concept of fake news and disinformation. This came to forefront thanks to the groundbreaking work of the aforementioned Russian investigative journalist Soshnikoff and whistleblower Savchuk. who was disgusted by the murder of Boris Nemtsov. But the ability of Russian journalists to cover the news has now been challenged as never before. In the wake of Putin's latest and more vicious assault on Ukraine, the Kremlin has launched a harsh new crackdown on the press. Threatening journalists with up to fifteen years in prison for spreading "false information" and banning them from even referring to the events in Ukraine as a war. Soshnikoff joins us to discuss the state of Russian media. And also, Maryan Zeblotskyy, a member of the Ukrainian Parliament joins to discuss the latest from Western Ukraine.GUEST:Maryan Zeblotzkyy, Member of Ukrainian ParliamentAndrei Soshnikoff (@Soshnikoff), Current Time TV, former BBC journalist/Transparency International RU analystHOSTS:Michael Isikoff (@Isikoff), Chief Investigative Correspondent, Yahoo NewsDaniel Klaidman (@dklaidman), Editor in Chief, Yahoo NewsVictoria Bassetti (@VBass), fellow, Brennan Center for Justice (contributing co-host)RESOURCES:Yahoo News' Tom LoBianco's latest piece on Putin - Here.Yaoo News' Niamh Cavanagh's latest piece on Zelensky - Here.Follow us on Twitter: @SkullduggeryPodListen and subscribe to "Skullduggery" on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.Email us with feedback, questions or tips: SkullduggeryPod@yahoo.com. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

History Is Dank
The Magnitsky Act

History Is Dank

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 47:59


As the situation develops in Ukraine, Strider looks back to 2012 when U.S. Congress passed the Magnitsky Act. In remembrance of the brave Sergei Magnitsky. patreon.com/striderwilson Sources: ‘Red Notice' by Bill Browder 2015, ‘The Slavic Connexion: The Russian Opposition and the Legacy of Boris Nemtsov with Vladimir Kara-Murza' The University of Texas as Austin, State.gov, Crsreports.congress.gov, Mccaininstitute.org, Meduza.io ‘Remembering The Winter Of Protests', Wikipedia.org, yahoo.com ‘West Unleashes SWIFT Ban, More Crushing Penalties on Russia' by Zeke Miller, Raf Casert, Ellen Knickmeyer, Ken Sweet 2022 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Wonderer's History Podcast
Statement of solidarity with the Ukrainian people

Wonderer's History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2022 1:38


My thoughts are with everyone in Ukraine defending their homes, families and country. For listeners based in the UK if you can you can donate to the appeal made by the British Red Cross : https://donate.redcross.org.uk/appeal/ukraine-crisis-appeal Image from pexels.com by Kostiantyn Stupak Let there be peace soon, Slava Ukraina & Slava Ukraini! Also remembering On this day (27 Feb) 2015 Boris Nemtsov who was ruthlessly assassinated while being in Moscow to help organize a rally against the Russian military intervention in Ukraine and the Russian financial crisis. Vichnaya Pamyat.

Q & A, Hosted by Jay Nordlinger
The Soviet Past, the Russian Present — and the Future

Q & A, Hosted by Jay Nordlinger

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2022 46:24


Vladimir Kara-Murza is a Russian democracy leader, writer, documentary-maker, etc. He has long been admired by Jay and many others. Kara-Murza worked with Boris Nemtsov, the Russian opposition leader murdered in 2015. He himself has been subject to two murder attempts (by poison). In this “Q&A,” Kara-Murza and Jay discuss Russian civil society; the relationship between the current government and... Source

The Russia File
Beyond Electoral Politics: Social Change, Not Political Awakening

The Russia File

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2021 28:56


Most Russians have long stopped expecting that any real change may come from electoral politics, a playing field tightly controlled by the Kremlin. And yet, a slew of recent, successful popular movements are proving that, even without real elections, Russians can stand up for their interests. People have defended their electoral choice in Khabarovsk, prevented unwanted construction in Yekaterinburg, and stopped a huge landfill from being built in the Arkhangelsk region. Russia's most prominent opposition figure Alexei Navalny also recently returned to Moscow from Berlin, where he had received medical treatment in the aftermath of his attempted poisoning. Navalny was promptly arrested, but his followers are organizing protests all over Russia. The Kennan Institute's Maxim Trudolyubov discusses Russia's newfound social and political activism with Zhanna Nemtsova, co-founder of the Boris Nemtsov Foundation for Freedom. The organization is named after Boris Nemtsov, Zhanna's father, who was murdered almost six years ago.

From Our Own Correspondent Podcast
Peeling Back the Layers

From Our Own Correspondent Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2016 27:58


Stories of surface image - and underlying reality - from around the world, introduced by Kate Adie. In Moscow, the alleged killers of liberal politician Boris Nemtsov are on trial, but questions remain about who was really responsible for his murder. Sarah Rainsford, who remembers Nemtsov as one of the poster boys for the newly democratic Russia of the 1990s, describes seeing the legal process unfold in court. In Ethiopia, some of the country's finest farmland is drying out as drought threatens the food supply for almost 18 million people - and Nicola Kelly's left unsure that traditional methods of weather forecasting, like reading signs in the livers of slaughtered goats, can work in these conditions. While travelling in Costa Rica's verdant forests, Tim Hartley also dug into the causes of a rot creeping across the country: corruption, on both the small and large scale. Bob Walker's been trudging a pilgrimage path in the footsteps of St Olaf through rural Sweden, and stepped into some ongoing debates about how many migrants the country could or should shelter. In Morocco, it's not easy for women to walk unmolested and Morgan Meaker hears from some who'd like to put an end to the endemic harassment on the streets.

The Mind Renewed : Thinking Christianly in a New World Order
TMR 104 : Dr. Paul Craig Roberts : Washington's Path to War with Russia

The Mind Renewed : Thinking Christianly in a New World Order

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2015 80:13


Dr. Paul Craig Roberts (former US Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy) returns to the programme for an extended interview on the ongoing tensions between Washington and Moscow. Drawing upon his extensive experience in government, academia and journalism, Dr. Roberts explains how Washington's current hostility towards Russia, with its demonisation of Vladimir Putin, is a bitter fruit of the neoconservative ideology of world hegemony that came to dominate US centres of power from the early 1990s onwards. Assessing the geopolitical landscape with an eye to historical, economic and political realities, Dr. Roberts judges there to be only two hopes for the world to avert nuclear Armageddon: a Europe decisively resistant to Washington diktat, or economic collapse of the US empire itself. We also discuss the murder of Boris Nemtsov, prospects for Washington-agitated colour revolutions in Central Asia/Caucasus, MH17 and the growth of the police state in the US. (For show notes please visit http://themindrenewed.com)

The Mandatory Sampson Podcast
MSP21: Tri-State Conference Call

The Mandatory Sampson Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2015 68:44


This week, despite a heavy snowfall, the guys get together using the power of the internet and modern technology to discuss a variety of topics including Senator James Inhofe bringing a snowball onto the Senate floor to disprove climate change, the DOJ's report about rampant racial bias within the Ferguson Police Department, Cleveland blaming Tamir Rice for his own death, the unmasking of “Jihadi John” Mohammed Emwazi, the shooting death of Vladimir Putin political opponent Boris Nemtsov, and a wrap-up of UFC 184. Check it out! Follow us on Twitter: @ManSamp, @A_Lozzi, @JoeyFromJerzey, and @StandUpNYLabs Watch this episode in full on DailyMotion: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2iv35t_the-mandatory-sampson-podcast-21-tri-state-conference-call_fun Watch live on DailyMotion, Thursdays at 4:00pm: www.dailymotion.com/video/x2hj1sj_s…y-labs-live_fun Please rate and subscribe on iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/manda…id932147356?mt=2 Go to www.StandUpNYLabs.com to listen to all of the other great podcasts on the network.