Our guest on the podcast this week is Lev Aleksandrovich Ponomarev (pictured, left, with the late Andrei Babushkin). Lev
Ponomarev is a human rights activist and head of the For Human Rights movement
and a member of the Moscow Helsinki Group. He also participated in the creation
of the Memorial Human Rights Center. As a legal entity, the For Human Rights Movement was
liquidated by a November 2019 decision of the Russian Supreme Court. Lev
Ponomarev became one of the first private individuals to be included in the
registry of "foreign agents" when the Russian Ministry of Justice
included him in the corresponding list on December 28, 2020.
This podcast is in Russian. You can also listen to the podcast on our website, SoundCloud, Spotify, iTunes, Google Podcasts, Anchor and YouTube.
The questions we ask Lev Ponomarev include:
1 Andrei Babushkin, the well-known human rights defender, died
recently - on the night of May 14. You knew him well for many years. What kind
of person was he?
2 When did you leave Russia and what made you take this
difficult decision?
3 What is the situation like for human rights defenders who still
live and work in Russia today?
4 You were one of the organizers of the peace movement in
Russia. How strong is this movement?
5 How difficult is it to continue your work outside of
Russia?
6 How long can Russian propaganda be effective in the face
of Russia's enormous human and material losses during the war?
7 What effect do sanctions have inside Russia?
8 Many people now use the word "fascism" to
describe Putin's regime in Russia. Would you use this term?
9 You have advocated democratic reforms in Russia since at
least the late 1980s. Why have these reforms - at least to date - failed so badly?
10 How do you see future developments?
Sergei Nikitin writes on Facebook: " Lev Ponomarev said, 'The atmosphere in the country now is like, well, they’re
not shooting us yet, but... What is there to say? I’ve been squeezed out, I have
been forced to go abroad. The attacks were almost daily. But I wasn't beaten up
once, thank God. I have to thank those guys who attacked me. They showed
humanism, so to speak. Well, they poured something smelly over me, and I had to
throw away my jacket and trousers. The cops stopped me in the metro, told me I
was on the federal wanted list, and then they drove me around town and let me
go. In general, I realized I had to leave.' In our latest podcast on Rights in Russia, Simon and I
talked with Lev Ponomarev. We remembered Andrei Babushkin, who has died recently,
discussed the human rights situation in Russia and considered possible
scenarios for the future.
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