WI(L)DER EUROPE
Punks put Putin on the back foot
By Edward Lucas - 06.09.2012 / 04:34 CET
Of all the Kremlin's enemies in recent years, Pussy Riot may prove the hardest to dismiss.
This article is reserved for paying subscribers...

Select your offer today and receive:
Please log in to read this article:
Don't have a login yet?
Discover your benefits and register for free now! It only takes a minute.

© 2013 European Voice. All rights reserved.
|
To prevent corrupt Russian officials being barred from Europe, Russia is now using the threat of an adoption ban against European states |
 |
KICKING UP A STINK Pussy Riot's Maria Alyokhina, Yekaterina Samutsevich and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova during a court hearing in Moscow. REUTERS
To prevent corrupt Russian officials being barred from Europe, Russia is now using the threat of an adoption ban against European states
The US's Magnitsky list may be too short, but it has already saved a life
The European Union should show that it is prepared to act against human-rights abuses in Russia
The death of the exiled Russian oligarch gives the Russian opposition a chance to refashion itself
Germany withdraws its objection to visa-free travel.