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A protester stormed the set of a Russian evening live broadcast with a sign in English reading: "No War. The woman, Marina Ovsyannikova, was an employee of the state-owned Channel One network in Moscow and was later detained and taken into custody, according to human rights group OVD-Info. Her sign also included other messages in Russian reading, "Don't believe the propaganda" and "you are being lied to. OVD-Info posted a pre-recorded video from Ovsyannikova after her protest where she said what's happening in Ukraine is a crime. The responsibility for this aggression lies on the conscience of only one person and this person is Vladimir Putin," she said. What's everyone talking about?


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A Staffer Crashed Russia's Main Evening Newscast With An Anti-War Sign




PolitiFact | Photo of a girl confronting soldier is from in West Bank, not Ukraine in
Viewers tuning into Russia's main evening news broadcast live on Monday night were briefly treated to the sight of something unscripted and which the Kremlin has desperately been trying to hide from them: an anti-war protest. As newsreader Ekaterina Andreeva introduced a story on the program Vremya, or "Time," which has aired for decades on the state-run Channel One Russia, another woman suddenly appeared behind her. Clutching a cardboard sign that featured the Russian and Ukrainian flags, the woman made sure people watching at home could read the words imprinted on it: "Stop the war. A woman rushed onto a Russian state-run Channel One broadcast tonight with an anti-war sign. The remarkable protest was the work of Marina Ovsyannikova, an editor at Channel One who risked her job — and her freedom — to let Russians know the truth about the deadly havoc President Vladimir Putin is waging on their neighbors in Ukraine. Russian human rights activist Pavel Chikov identified Ovsyannikova on Twitter and said his group would be funding her legal defense.



A Russian who protested the war on live TV refused to retract her statement in court
A dissenting employee entered the studio Monday during Russia's most-watched evening news broadcast, holding up a poster saying "No War" and condemning Moscow's military action in Ukraine. The incident was a highly unusual breach of security at the tightly controled state broadcaster Channel One. Its flagship pm news show called "Time" has run since the Soviet era and is watched by millions around the country, particularly by older Russians. OVD-Info, which monitors detentions at opposition protests, identified the woman as Marina Ovsyannikova, saying she works at Channel One as an editor and was now at a police station.





It was written by Maxim Osipov as he made his journey into exile from his town of Tarusa to Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, where Russians are allowed to enter without visas, and finally to Berlin. Cold , ashamed , relieved. It was a book that held us rapt last year. In it we sought and found coincidences with our own recent situation. We are those who left escaped, fled Russia shortly after it invaded Ukraine.

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