That man is 86-year-old Mark Kuperman, the first mayor of the oil town of Okha and now a well-known human rights advocate. In April 2024, he found himself on trial, accused of “public incitement to terrorism” — a charge that could carry years in prison. His alleged crime? Sharing an unpublished political essay and discussing it in his kitchen.
For 18 months, Kuperman had been under the surveillance of the Russian security services. His home was bugged. According to investigators, one of his own acquaintances even filed a denunciation against him — a practice reminiscent of Soviet-era informant culture.
The charges stem from a document titled A Plan for Western Involvement in Regime Change in Russia: Humanitarian Occupation, which authorities claim Kuperman circulated. The title alone was enough to raise suspicion in today’s Russia. But the document itself was actually penned by another prominent human rights figure, Lev Ponomaryov.