Home Globe Yegor Zhukov: Leading Russian opposition blogger beaten up

Yegor Zhukov: Leading Russian opposition blogger beaten up

by editor

Image copyright
Getty Images

Image caption

Yegor Zhukov is a prominent critic of President Putin

A prominent opposition blogger in Russia, Yegor Zhukov, has been beaten up in Moscow and taken to hospital for treatment.

Police have launched a criminal investigation into the assault.

His supporters posted a photo on Facebook of his bloodied and swollen face. The attack happened near his home on Sunday evening, they said.

In December Zhukov, 22, was given a three-year suspended jail term for “inciting extremism”.

A police statement quoted by Interfax news agency said Zhukov had told investigators that “two unidentified men had attacked him on Rashchupkin Street and injured him”.

Zhukov is now also a political commentator on Russian radio. He was arrested last August during protests against the exclusion of independent and opposition candidates from Moscow council elections.

  • Young symbol of Russian opposition avoids jail

Earlier on Sunday, Zhukov said on his YouTube channel that he had been rejected for a master’s course on cinema at Moscow’s prestigious Higher School of Economics, after initially being accepted for it. He linked that rejection to this political activity.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionYegor Zhukov among supporters outside a Moscow court

German concern over Navalny

In Berlin, Russia’s most famous campaigner against President Vladimir Putin, the blogger Alexei Navalny, remains in intensive care in an induced coma, suffering from suspected nerve agent poisoning.

  • Navalny’s team sees Kremlin behind attack
  • Navalny and Russia’s arsenal of exotic poisons

Germany has called on Russia to do more to clarify the suspected poisoning. Mr Navalny was flown out of Russia nine days ago. On Friday the hospital said he was in a serious but stable condition.

His supporters believe he was poisoned by a cup of tea he drank at an airport in Tomsk in Siberia, before boarding a flight.

Commenting on relations with Russia, Germany’s Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said they were under “dark clouds”.

“Sanctions remain in place, and will for as long as the basis for them does not change. And at the moment there are also some dark clouds and of course we expect Russia to contribute more to the clarification of the Navalny case than it currently is.”

Source link

Related Posts