Agency, Moscow.
Published by: Jeet Kumar
Updated Wed, 02 Mar 2022 02:08 AM IST
Summary
Who is behind the hacking of the website, it is not yet known. Such interference in the media is being seen as a sign of the growing anti-war sentiment among the Russian general public.
hear the news
hear the news
At the same time, Russia, unhappy with the news being shown about the war, has also banned some media forums. The action is being seen as evidence of President Vladimir Putin’s government’s efforts to quell dissent.
However, who is behind the hacking of the website, it is not yet known. Such interference in the media is being seen as a sign of the growing anti-war sentiment among the Russian general public.
Meanwhile, Russia’s Ministry of Communications and the media watchdog group Roskomnadzor have barred several Russian and Ukrainian media organizations from showing reports about the war. The New Times, a Russian magazine that has publicly criticized the Kremlin, was barred from reporting details of Russian military casualties in Ukraine, which the Russian Defense Ministry has not yet disclosed.
Demonstrations continue in Russia
Protests against the attack on Ukraine have continued in Russia for the past five days, while nearly one million people have signed an online petition calling for an end to the war. Many people involved in these demonstrations have been detained. At the same time, officials have imposed restrictions on the social media platform and threatened to shut down the independent news site.
in a few years we’ll be like north korea
Independent news site Meduja has shared messages appearing on the main pages of some of the hacked websites. This message reads, ‘Dear citizens, we request you to stop this madness and do not send your sons and husband to die. In a few years we will be like North Korea. What do we benefit from this? Will Putin’s name be recorded in history? This war is not for us, stop it.
Expansion
At the same time, Russia, unhappy with the news being shown about the war, has also banned some media forums. The action is being seen as evidence of President Vladimir Putin’s government’s efforts to quell dissent.
However, who is behind the hacking of the website, it is not yet known. Such interference in the media is being seen as a sign of the growing anti-war sentiment among the Russian general public.
Meanwhile, Russia’s Ministry of Communications and the media watchdog group Roskomnadzor have barred several Russian and Ukrainian media organizations from showing reports about the war. The New Times, a Russian magazine that has publicly criticized the Kremlin, was barred from reporting details of Russian military casualties in Ukraine, which the Russian Defense Ministry has not yet disclosed.
Demonstrations continue in Russia
Protests against the attack on Ukraine have continued in Russia for the past five days, while nearly one million people have signed an online petition calling for an end to the war. Many people involved in these demonstrations have been detained. At the same time, officials have imposed restrictions on the social media platform and threatened to shut down the independent news site.
in a few years we’ll be like north korea
Independent news site Meduja has shared messages appearing on the main pages of some of the hacked websites. This message reads, ‘Dear citizens, we request you to stop this madness and do not send your sons and husband to die. In a few years we will be like North Korea. What do we benefit from this? Will Putin’s name be recorded in history? This war is not for us, stop it.