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Protests against the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine

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Protests against the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
Part of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
and Russian opposition protest rallies
Ukraine solidarity protest Berlin Pariser Platz with lighted Brandenburg Gate 2022-02-24 02.jpg
Protesters at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany.
Date24 February 2022 (2022-02-24)–ongoing (3 weeks and 6 days)
Location
Caused by
Goals
Methods
  • Demonstrations
  • Internet activism
  • Strike action
  • Boycott movement
Parties to the civil conflict

Russia Russian opposition
Russia Anti-government soldiers
Anti-government police officers


International protesters

Lead figures
Russia Leonid Ivashov Russia Vladimir Putin
Mikhail Mishustin
Alexander Lukashenko
Casualties
Arrested24 February: 1,745
25 February: 437
26 February: 413

Protests against the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine occurred spontaneously and simultaneously in many places worldwide, including in Russia and in Russian-occupied Ukraine.

In Russia

In the seven days from 24 February to 2 March, over 6,500 people in 53 cities across Russia have been detained by police for protesting against the invasion.[1][2][3][4][5][6] Since the start of the war until 6 March nearly 13,000 have been detained.[7][8][9]

In violation of the Russian Constitution and international human rights law, Putin has made peaceful public protest without permission of the authorities illegal.[10][11]

This background information is necessary to understand the extreme intimidation caused by the large number of arrests and by the seemingly reasonable warning of the authorities to not take part in "unsanctioned" protests.[12] Russian authorities warned Russians of legal repercussions for joining anti-war protests.[13] Over 60 Russian activists and journalists have been arrested.[14]

On 27 February, another 2,063 people were detained at street protests against the war.[15]

On 27 February, a van with markings that read "People, wake up!", "This is war", "Putin is scum!" crashed and caught fire in Pushkinskaya Square.[16][17]

More than 30,000 technology workers,[18] 6,000 medical workers, 3,400 architects,[19] more than 4,300 teachers,[20] more than 17,000 artists,[21] 5,000 scientists,[22] and 2,000 actors, directors, and other creative figures signed open letters calling for Putin's government to stop the war.[23][24] Some Russians who signed petitions against Russia's war in Ukraine have already lost their jobs.[25]

Over 281,000 Russians have signed a petition to impeach Putin.[26]

On 9 March, an unnamed person burned down a military comissariat in Lukhovitsy (Moscow Oblast) with the intent of destroying the personal files of conscripts to prevent them from being sent to war.[27]

Academics

Troitsky variant (also known as TrV-Nauka), an independent Russian popular science newspaper, published an open letter against war signed by more than 7400 Russian scientists including many famous academician and members of the Russian Academy of Sciences.[28][29][30][31] Oleg Anisimov, a scientist delegate from Russia, apologized to his colleague from Ukraine at the UN climate conference.[32][33] Mikhail Gelfand, bioinformatician and a member of the Academia Europaea, also made a statement against war.[34]

1,200 students, faculty and staff of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, affiliated with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, signed an open letter stating that they "consider it morally unacceptable to stay on the sidelines and keep silent when people are dying in a neighboring state. They are dying through the fault of those who preferred weapons instead of peaceful diplomacy. .... Many generations of future diplomats will have to rebuild the trust in Russia and the good relations with our neighbors that have been lost."[35] Students, graduate students, teachers, staff and graduates of the oldest university in Russia, Moscow State University named after M.V. Lomonosov - 7500 people in total - also signed an open letter against the "special military operation".[36]

Activists

On 24 February, human rights activist Lev Ponomaryov started a petition to protest the invasion, which gathered more than 1,5 million signatures by 3 March.[37]

Businesspeople and oligarchs

A number of Russian entrepreneurs, businesspeople and billionaires, including Oleg Deripaska,[38][39] Mikhail Fridman,[38] Oleg Tinkov,[40] Mikhail Khodorkovsky,[41] Nikolay Storonsky of Revolut,[42] Vladimir Lisin,[39] Alexei Mordashov[39] and Andrei Melnichenko,[43] have spoken out against the invasion, and called on for the Russian military forces to be withdrawn from Ukraine.

On 3 March, Lukoil, the second-largest Russian energy company after Gazprom, called for a ceasefire and diplomatic means to solve the conflict.[44]

Celebrities

The invasion was condemned by television presenter Ksenia Sobchak, pop star Valery Meladze, writer Dmitry Glukhovsky, journalist and YouTuber Yury Dud, film director Roman Volobuev, rapper Noize MC, Dynamo Moscow striker Fyodor Smolov, actress Chulpan Khamatova[45][46] and the television host Ivan Urgant.[47][48][49] Urgant's late-night show subsequently disappeared from the scheduled programs on the state-owned TV station Channel One.[48] Dozens of other Russian artists, TV presenters and other celebrities spoke out on social networks against Russia's military actions in Ukraine.[50]

Russian rapper Oxxxymiron cancelled six sold-out concerts in Moscow and St. Petersburg, stating, "I cannot entertain you when Russian missiles are falling on Ukraine. When residents of Kyiv are forced to hide in basements and in the metro, while people are dying."[51] He went on to announce a series of benefit concerts in other countries, entitled "Russians Against War", the proceeds from which would be donated to NGOs helping Ukrainian refugees. The first of these concerts was held in Istanbul, which has a large Russian diaspora consisting of people who left the country in protest of the invasion.[52]

Cosmonauts

On 19 March, a trio of Russian cosmonauts (commander Oleg Artemyev and flight engineers Sergey Korsakov and Denis Matveev) boarded the International Space Station wearing yellow-and-blue flight suits in the colours of Ukraine's flag.[53]

Sports

NHL hockey player Alexander Ovechkin criticized Russia's invasion of Ukraine.[54] Tennis players Daniil Medvedev, Andrey Rublev and Yevgeny Kafelnikov and other Russian sportsmen also made statements against the war.[55][56]

Figure skater Evgenia Medvedeva spoke out on her Instagram account, writing "I hope this all ends as soon as possible, like a bad dream."[57]

Military

A commander of Russia's 74th Motorized Rifle Brigade was reportedly quoted as saying; "We were not going to fight - we were collecting information" after the entire platoon was reportedly captured in Chernihiv.[58] These comments seem to be echoed in videos published by the Ukrainian military, of captured Russian soldiers that were potentially made under duress. The soldiers in the video's made comments such as; "I didn't know we were going to Ukraine, I was tricked." and "We were deceived and used like a meat shield."[59] Others were reportedly sabotaging their own equipment in order to avoid combat, while suffering from lack of resources and low morale.[60]

Organizations

The founders of the "Immortal Regiment" commemoration movement, in which ordinary Russians carry photographs of veteran family members in marches around Russia held annually to mark WWII Victory Day on 9 May, called on the Putin "to cease fire", describing the use of force as "inhuman".[24]

Olga Larkina, the director of Russia's Committee of Soldiers' Mothers, raised concerns to Russian investigative news outlet Meduza that many of the soldiers in Ukraine had been forcibly sent to Ukraine. Larkina alleged that Russian conscripts had been pressured or forced into signing contracts to become soldiers, sent to Ukraine and family members have lost contact with them.[61]

Politicians and government officials

Novosibirsk city councilor Helga Pirogova wearing the Ukrainian vyshyvanka and a wreath of sunflowers to protest the invasion

Jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny condemned Russia's attack on Ukraine and called those who launched the war "bandits and thieves."[62] Russian opposition activist and politician Marina Litvinovich called for anti-war protests in Russian cities. She was detained by Russian police as she left her house.[63]

State Duma deputy Mikhail Matveev voted in favor of the recognition of the Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics but later denounced the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, stating "I voted for peace, not for war. I wanted Russia to become a shield so that Donbas would not be bombed, not for Kyiv to be bombed."[64] State Duma deputy Oleg Smolin said he was "shocked" by the invasion.[65] Liza Peskova, daughter of Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov, shared an image with the "No to war" hashtag on Instagram.[66]

More than 100 Russian municipal deputies signed a letter against the war with Ukraine.[67] One of the deputies, Alexander Budberg, sent a request to State Duma for the impeachment of Vladimir Putin.[68]

On 16 March, the member of Novosibirsk city council Helga Pirogova called on to immediately withdraw the Russian troops from Ukrainian territory, and attended the city council meeting wearing a blue vyshyvanka and a wreath of sunflowers (both of which are traditional symbols of Ukraine) to protest the invasion.[69]

Press

Russian Nobel Peace Prize winner Dmitry Muratov announced that the Novaya Gazeta newspaper would publish its next edition in both Ukrainian and Russian. Muratov, journalist Mikhail Zygar, director Vladimir Mirzoyev, and others signed a document stating that Ukraine was not a threat to Russia and calling for Russian citizens "to say no to this war."[70] Elena Chernenko, a journalist at Kommersant, circulated a critical open letter that was signed by 170 journalists and academics.[71]

State TV pundits

The protest of Marina Ovsyannikova, 14 March 2022

On 10 March, during a broadcast on Russia-1, the filmmaker and pundit Karen Shakhnazarov, who initially supported the invasion, called for an end to it, saying that the situation was at risk of becoming "an absolute humanitarian disaster", and that there is no realistic possibility for the Russian forces to seize Kyiv and other major Ukrainian cities.[72]

During the broadcast of Sunday Evening with Vladimir Solovyov, the State Duma member Semyon Bagdasarov described the situation with Ukraine as "another Afghanistan, but even worse". He added that on the Ukrainian side, "there are more people and they're more advanced in their weapon handling [than the Russians]", and concluded: “We don't need that. Enough already".[72]

On 14 March, a live broadcast of Channel One Russia was interrupted by news editor Marina Ovsyannikova holding a poster stating "No War. Stop the war, don't believe the propaganda, here you are being lied to. Russians against war." and shouting "Stop the war. No to war." before she was arrested.[73][74] Following Ovsyannikova's protest, an anonymous source working at the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company stated that the majority of Russian state TV employees oppose the invasion, and Ovsyannikova merely voiced out loud the general sentiment of her colleagues.[75] This information was independently confirmed by Elena Afanasyeva, the former head of creative planning at Channel One, who said that many state TV employees disagree with the channel's coverage of the war, and by another anonymous source close to Channel One who asserted that all of the channel's employees acknowledge that they're spreading lies about the war, and are dissatisfied with this state of affairs.[76] Ever since 24 February, a number of employees, including Lilia Gildeeva, Zhanna Agalakova, Maria Baronova and several other RT reporters, resigned from state TV in protest of the invasion; some of them subsequently left the country.[77]

Other professional communities

Open letters against the war were also published by professional associations of doctors and healthcare workers, NGO workers, lawyers,[78] psychologists and psychiatrists,[79] teachers, students,[80] economists,[81] employees of IT companies, workers of culture and art,[82] comedians,[83] workers in the beauty and fashion industry, film makers,[45][84] advertising and gaming industries, designers, animators, and architects.[85][86][87]

Outside Russia

Media

On 25 February, the Slovak tabloid Nový čas published Putin's photo edited to look like Hitler with the term 'Putler' on its cover.[88] Similar photos were also published by the British tabloid Daily Star (which called Putin "bloody Vlad") and by the Italian newspaper La Ragione.[89][90]

Protests

Pro-Ukrainian protests have occurred at several of Russia's embassies and consulates abroad, including those in:

Unable to protest at the Russian embassy in Tehran, Iranian protests took place at the Ukrainian embassy instead.[168][169] Protests were also held in Amman, Bern, Hong Kong, Istanbul, Luxembourg City, Nicosia, Sydney, Tokyo, Ulaanbaatar, and Vienna.[170][119][171][172][173][174][175] In Valencia, Venezuela, a group of students held a protest.[166][167] On 25 February, climate activist Greta Thunberg protested outside the Russian embassy in Stockholm.[176]

Protest rally in Tel Aviv, Israel on 26 February 2022
The flag of Ukraine flown outside the town hall of Caen (in France) as an expression of solidarity by local authorities.

During a constitutional referendum vote, Belarusian protestors in Minsk chanted "No to war" at polling stations.[177] According to Ministry of internal affairs of Belarus, 800 people were detained on that day.[178]

On 26 February, Ukrainians gathered at St. Nicholas Cathedral in Mapo District, Seoul, South Korea, praying for the peace of their motherland. After the prayer, they went out the church and raised the Ukrainian flag and protesting signs.[179] In the next day, around 300 people, including Ukrainians living in South Korea and their supporters, protest against Russia's invasion near the Russian Embassy in Seoul.[158]

On 26 February there were mass protests held in Tallinn, Tartu, and Narva. Estonian Police and Border Guard Board estimated 30,000 people were participating in the protest in Tallinn at its peak.[180] That was the largest protest in the country after 1991, when it restored its independence.[181]

On 27 February, more than 100,000 gathered in Berlin to protest against Russia's invasion of Ukraine.[182] On 28 February, instead of the traditional Carnival parade Kölner Rosenmontagszug [de], which had been cancelled due to COVID-19 a few days earlier,[183][184] more than 250,000 (instead of the anticipated 30,000) gathered in Cologne in a peace march to protest against the Russian invasion.[185]

Russian property

On 27 February, Taras Ostapchuk, a Ukrainian mechanic, appeared in Mallorcan court on charges of partially sinking the $7 million superyacht that he worked on. He stated that his boss ran a Russian state-owned supplies of military products and that he had gotten angry at the thought that his boss's company has supplied the missile that had struck a Kyiv apartment building that he had watched on his cellphone. Ostapchuk stated, "What do I need a job for if I don't have a country?", telling the court, "I don't regret anything I've done, and I would do it again."[186]

On 14 March a group called the London Maknovists; named after Ukrainian anarchist Nestor Makhno, announced they had reclaimed a Belgrave Square property in central London for Ukrainian refugees. The property is believed to be owned by Putin ally Oleg Deripaska, who was sanctioned by the UK government following the invasion. Multiple protestors hung banners off of the homes balcony and told reporters; "Michael Gove said oligarchs' homes should be expropriated to house Ukrainian refugees....We're doing the government's work for them..."[187]

Protest gallery

Buildings lit up in the Ukrainian colours

Several landmarks around the world were illuminated in the colours of the flag of Ukraine as a statement of solidarity.[188]

See also

References

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