Russian sixth-grader Masha Moskaleva drew an anti-war picture at school. Her father went to prison for it.
🧵They escaped Russia and applied for German protection. Germany said no.
It began with a child's drawing in 2022. Rather than seeing a child's expression, her school principal saw sedition in it and reported it to the police. This immediately activated the repressive state machinery.
Authorities didn't target the child directly. Instead, they went after her single father, Alexey Moskalev. They dug through his social media for "evidence" of disloyalty to the regime and found what they wanted. Alexey was charged with "discrediting" the Russian army over social media posts.
While awaiting trial, he was placed under house arrest and separated from his daughter. She was placed in the custody of social services.
On March 28, 2023, after just one day of proceedings, a Russian court sentenced Alexey to two years in prison. They clearly sought to make an example of Alexey: if you oppose the war, even passively, be ready to lose everything—your freedom, your family, even your life.
Luckily, the night before his sentencing, Alexey fled house arrest. For a brief moment, there was hope. But the network of repression stretches beyond Russia's borders, and Putin's allies in Belarus were there to assist.
Alexey made a fatal mistake and turned on his cell phone while in Minsk, Belarus. The Belarusian KGB quickly located and arrested him. His lawyer, Dmitry Zakhvatov, believes the operation was "carried out at the highest level" with direct FSB involvement. "The command to arrest Moskalev came from the very top," he said. A father's fate warranted attention from the highest echelons of power.
Moskalev served one year and 10 months in a penal colony because his original two-year sentence was reduced by two months after a court-ordered examination found "discreditation" in only three of five social media posts, not all five as initially claimed.
Alexey was finally released in October 2024, having served his sentence. But freedom was an illusion. While in the penal colony, FSB agents had given him a warning: "Don't think that when your sentence ends, we'll leave you alone. We'll be with you for life now."
Within days of his return home, police were already at his door. Realizing they could never live a normal life, Alexey and Masha made the decision to flee Russia for good, leaving almost everything they had behind.
With the help of human rights activists, they made their way to Germany in late October 2024. There, they applied for protection through a special humanitarian admission program (under Section 23 of the Residence Act) created specifically for Russians facing political persecution.
Germany considered their high-profile case for months. But in a devastating turn, their application was rejected in the summer of 2025. The reason wasn't that their story wasn't believed; it was a matter of timing and bureaucracy.
Unbeknownst to them, the German government had quietly stopped accepting new applications for that specific humanitarian program in the spring of 2024, months before they even arrived. Their application was submitted to a program that no longer existed for new entries.
The reality is that opposing Putin's regime carries an enormous personal cost: prison, loss of career, family separation, exile. Western countries have said they'll support those who pay this price. Alexey paid his price.
After surviving a Russian prison and a harrowing escape, he and his daughter are now stuck in legal limbo.
They're not looking for handouts or trying to be a burden on anyone. They could have contributed to their own country and will contribute to whatever nation takes them in.
I think they deserve better. Don't you?
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Some analysts still quote Dmitry Medvedev's war threats as if they mean anything.
🧵Let me explain why the former president's social media rants deserve pity, not serious analysis.
I knew several good people who were completely transformed by excessive alcohol consumption. Dmitry Medvedev was first changed by fear, then by the alcohol he used to treat that fear.
Several of his former associates now sit in prison with long sentences. Others were forced—literally—to kneel and beg for forgiveness. Medvedev simply lost himself in a bottle.
Europe just welcomed Russia's #3 official—the woman who personally signed off on invading Ukraine—to a conference in Geneva.
While ordinary Russians can't get tourist visas, sanctioned war enablers flew freely through EU airspace.
🧵So... who is Valentina Matviyenko?
Matviyenko ranks third in Russia's hierarchy after Putin and Prime Minister Mishustin. She's been speaker of the Federation Council since 2011 and a permanent member of Putin's Security Council.
In March 2020, she led the constitutional amendment vote that reset Putin's term limits. 160 senators voted in favor, 1 against. These changes allow Putin to potentially remain in power until 2036. She called it "one of the most important issues in Russia's modern history."
He orchestrated the annexation of Crimea. He predicts NATO's death. He funds European extremists and works with expelled Russian spies.
Right now, he's in Geneva as a legitimate "parliamentarian"
🧵 Here’s what you should know about Leonid Slutsky
The 6th World Conference of Parliament Speakers is happening in Geneva under the theme of "parliamentary cooperation for peace, justice and prosperity."
Russia sent 10 delegates, led by the speaker of the Russian Senate Valentina Matvienko. Most in the delegation are under Western sanctions.
Among them is Leonid Slutsky, Chairman of the Duma Committee on International Affairs since 2016 and leader of the LDPR party since 2022.
But his real influence goes back much further. Let me tell you about February 24, 2014.
Russian military came to collect deserter Semyon Subbotin from Armenian custody and haul him back to fight in Ukraine — local police saw them and drove him to safety instead.
🧵It's a commendable decision that shows how isolated Putin's regime has become
Subbotin had fled military service and was wanted in Russia for “unauthorized abandonment of a military unit”, or in other words, refusing to take part in the illegal war
He was held in Yerevan for three days, pending possible extradition. But when he was released from detention, Russian soldiers were waiting outside the holding facility
Whistleblower recruited by Russian intelligence exposes how Putin's spies pose as Ukrainian officials to trap dissidents.
@dossier_center publishes his firsthand account and the complete list of fake accounts and channels
Last August, Russian programmers suspected that some websites posing as Ukrainian intelligence resources were actually traps. They were right. And the man behind many of them was Semen Ryzhakov, a coerced informant for the FSB’s Tomsk branch
Ryzhakov spoke to Dossier Center after fleeing Russia. He provided documents, screenshots, and agent instructions, offering unprecedented access to a domestic FSB operation designed to provoke dissent and fabricate criminal cases
Another Putin official dead: Roman Starovoit, ex-Transport Minister, allegedly shot himself.
Since 2022, over 20 high-ranking officials have died: falling from windows, "suicides," mysterious heart attacks.
1/19 🧵Here's the long list of names
July 7 2025. Roman Starovoit, just fired as Transport Minister, was found in his car with a gunshot wound.
The official hypothesis is that he took his own life.
July 4 2025. Andrey Badalov, the 62-year-old vice president of the oil company Transneft, fell from the 17th floor of a building in Moscow. The death was ruled a suicide.
He had played a key role in helping the company mitigate the impact of Western sanctions.