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Russian journalist Yulia Latynina (file photo)
Russian journalist Yulia Latynina (file photo)

Yulia Latynina, a prominent Russian journalist and a searing critic of Russia's ruling political elite, says she has left Russia after unknown assailants set fire to her car.

In a Skype call to the popular radio station Ekho Moskvy on September 9, Latynina said she was abroad along with her parents and that it was “unlikely” that she “would return to Russia anytime soon.”

On September 3, Latynina, who hosts a weekly political commentary show at Ekho Moskvy, said that unknown “arsonists” set fire on her car, which was parked near her “wooden house.”

“The gas tank could have exploded, and the only reason it didn’t was because it wasn’t full,” Latynina said, adding that if her father “hadn’t put out the fire, it would have burned down the house because the flames were already four meters high.”

In a statement on September 4, Russia’s Journalists’ Union supported Latynina’s claim and said the incident wasn’t a mere act of “hooliganism and intimidation.”

In August 2016, Latynina was doused with fecal matter by an unidentified assailant. Police launched a probe, but never identified the culprit.

Following that attack, the independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta, to which Latynina is a regular contributor, said in a statement that Latynina has "regularly" received threats and that "several years ago" a planned attack on her was thwarted.

Latynina temporarily left Russia in March 2015 after her name was linked to a rumored "kill list" that reportedly included the names of numerous individuals who openly criticize the country’s leadership.

She said at the time that she decided to leave Russia after noticing that she was being followed on the street.

With reporting by medusa.io, tvrain.ru, and Interfax
Russian theater director Kirill Serebrennikov (file photo)
Russian theater director Kirill Serebrennikov (file photo)

Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party in Russia, has asked the Russian Investigative Committee to seek the release of acclaimed director Kirill Serebrennikov from house arrest, Russian news media reported on September 8.

In a letter to Committee Chairman Aleksandr Bastrykin, media reported that Zhirinovsky said the arrest caused a big public reaction and he appealed to the committee to ask the Moscow City Court to alter the "measure of restraint" on Serebrennikov, releasing him from house arrest and instead order him not to leave Moscow.

Zhirinovsky and his party are nominally in the opposition but back President Vladimir Putin on most key issues.

He is one of several prominent Russians with Kremlin ties who criticized aspects of the case against Serebrennikov.

Serebrennikov, 47, is artistic director of the Gogol Center theater in Moscow and founded a dramatic collective called Seventh Studio.

He was detained on August 22 and could be sentenced to 10 years in prison if tried and convicted on fraud charges he has dismissed as unfounded and absurd.

Some 1,300 young artists and other cultural figures have signed a petition in support of Serebrennikov, who investigators accuse of embezzling at least 68 million rubles ($1.1 million) in state arts funding.

The Moscow court previously rejected Serebrennikov's appeal for release on bail on September 4.

It said it would allow him to leave his home only for two-hour walks each day. He was ordered to remain under arrest until October 19.

Based on reporting by RBC.ru, Meduza.io, and Rusreality.com

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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