This is the first case of someone being tried under a new Russian law that criminalises an individual for collecting information about the military – however unclassified – unless that person has registered as a foreign agent.
Alsu Kurmasheva has worked for RFE/RL since 1998 covering the issues faced by ethnic minorities in the Volga and Ural regions, as well as issues around protecting and preserving Tatar language and culture. She is a dual Russian and American national and lives with her family in Prague.
She travelled to Russia on 20 May for a private visit and was detained at Kazan Airport on 2 June while waiting for her flight home. Her passports were confiscated and she was fined for failing to notify the Interior Ministry of her second citizenship and her permanent residence in the Czech Republic.
Kurmasheva then spent months in Russia waiting for her documents to be returned only to be detained again on 18 October and accused of failing to declare herself a foreign agent.
State-run regional TV channel Tatarstan said that Kurmasheva had “collected information on Russia’s military activities and transmitted it to foreign sources”. According to regional website Tatar-Inform, the investigators suggested Kurmasheva had been given information about lecturers at one of Tatarstan’s universities being drafted into the army, something they believed was being used by international institutions to discredit Russia.
The same TV channel also published a screenshot of what it described as personal correspondence between Kurmasheva and her husband Pavel Butorin, the director of TV channel Current Time, which is also part of RFE/RL, in which they discuss handing over a book at a meeting, thought to be a reference to “No to War”, which was published by Idel.Realii in November and in which people from the Volga region speak out against the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
The channel said Kurmasheva had “distributed her book at the White House,” and had even given a copy to US President Joe Biden. Tatar-Inform suggested that there could be further criminal charges pressed against Kurmasheva, given that she had also published “a book that portrays Russia’s war in Ukraine in a negative light”.