Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Russian journalist arrested for years !

Russian journalist arrested for years

Time:2024-05-07 19:38:48 source:Universal Update news portal

TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — A Russian journalist who has worked for both state-funded and independent media was detained Monday and faces charges of justifying terrorism through posts on the Telegram messaging app, her lawyer said.

The detention of Nadezhda Kevorkova comes amid an intensifying crackdown on journalists, opposition figures and critics of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Kevorkova is expected to appear in court Tuesday, her lawyer Kaloy Akhilgov said on Telegram. If convicted, she could be sentenced to up to five years in prison.

Akhilgov said the charges involve two posts, one in 2018 and the other in 2021.

The post in 2018 republished an article written by another journalist about the 2005 attack by Islamic militants on the city of Nalchik in southern Russia in which 139 people were killed, including 94 militants, the lawyer said. The 2021 post concerned the Taliban, but Akhilgov did not detail about what was in that post.

Related information
  • Historical community grows with new vitality in China's Guangdong
  • Ambassadors gain insights from visits to Xinjiang
  • Xiplomacy: China, Algeria Mark Anniversary of Ties with Eyes on Stronger Partnership
  • Chinese scientific expedition team returns safely to Mount Qomolangma base camp
  • In pics: Snow Town scenic spot in Hailin City, Heilongjiang
  • Book on Xi's Discourses on Management of Water Resources Published
  • Xi Focus: Xi Calls for Striving to Realize Economic Goals in 2023
  • Former U.S. diplomat calls for more communication
Recommended content
  • Book of Xi's Discourses on Sci
  • Tourism festival spurs consumption in Shanghai
  • Xi Story: Prioritizing Regular Physical Exercises from an Early Age
  • Xi Focus: Elevating China's Internet Sector to New Heights
  • Rural scenery in China's Gansu
  • China urges U.S., Japan to stop forming anti