Author: George Barros
Key Takeaway: The Kremlin is using the COVID-19 pandemic to test an
expanded societal control toolkit. The Kremlin has empowered Russian security services,
deployed Russia’s national guard nationally, empowered the Ministry of Defense
as a domestic actor for the first time, implemented mass digital surveillance,
and further tightened control over Russia’s information space. The Kremlin
seeks to expand its ability to control the Russian population in the long-term,
as Russian President Vladimir Putin increasingly relies on authoritarian
measures to preserve his regime, and suppress potential unrest in the aftermath
of the national voting on Russia’s constitutional amendments on July 1. Digital
surveillance technology, such as facial recognition, geolocation on smart
devices, and comprehensive digital databases for all Russian citizens, will
enable the Kremlin to circumvent the cost requirements associated with
constructing and staffing a massive control infrastructure. These technologies
will further erode privacy in Russia and grant the Kremlin new capabilities to
discretely identify and neutralize its opponents with minimal public
confrontation. Putin will increasingly rely on societal control tools and digitally
targeted repression to stifle critics and preserve his regime.
The COVID-19 pandemic presented the Kremlin with opportunities
to test existing societal control tools and implement new ones. Putin has steadily
expanded his societal control tools since 2000, but the pandemic provided
opportunities to refine them further under the pretext of quarantine
enforcement. Putin will likely use these tools to suppress critics of the
Kremlin’s July 1 national voting. The Kremlin intends for the vote to provide
popular legitimacy to the constitutional amendments Putin introduced in January
2020.[1]
The amendments, among other things, reset Putin’s terms as president, enabling
him to run for president until 2036.[2]
The Kremlin is empowering Russian security services and the military through expanded funding and powers.
The Kremlin took several measures to increase the loyalty and power of the Russian National Guard (Rosgvardia) and police. Rosgvardia began its first country-wide enforcement of Russia’s quarantine in various cities on March 30.[3] Russia’s parliament passed a law increasing social benefits for Russian security services and establishing mandatory polygraph tests for Rosgvardia members on March 11.[4] These changes are likely intended to increase Rosgvardia’s loyalty and status as an internal security force. The Kremlin increased bonuses for Rosgvardia and police for who work protest control in Moscow and Saint Petersburg – Russia’s two most populous cities – on January 24.[5] The Kremlin likely used these bonuses to prepare for protests against Putin’s constitutional amendments, not COVID-19 efforts, because the Kremlin issued the bonuses in January before the pandemic struck Russia in March.[6] Rosgvardia also spent COVID-related emergency funding on military equipment postured against Ukraine, not COVID-19 relief.[7]
The Kremlin took several measures to increase the loyalty and power of the Russian National Guard (Rosgvardia) and police. Rosgvardia began its first country-wide enforcement of Russia’s quarantine in various cities on March 30.[3] Russia’s parliament passed a law increasing social benefits for Russian security services and establishing mandatory polygraph tests for Rosgvardia members on March 11.[4] These changes are likely intended to increase Rosgvardia’s loyalty and status as an internal security force. The Kremlin increased bonuses for Rosgvardia and police for who work protest control in Moscow and Saint Petersburg – Russia’s two most populous cities – on January 24.[5] The Kremlin likely used these bonuses to prepare for protests against Putin’s constitutional amendments, not COVID-19 efforts, because the Kremlin issued the bonuses in January before the pandemic struck Russia in March.[6] Rosgvardia also spent COVID-related emergency funding on military equipment postured against Ukraine, not COVID-19 relief.[7]
The Kremlin empowered the
Ministry of Defense (MoD) and broadened its scope of work as a domestic relief actor
for the first time. The Kremlin expanded the MoD’s responsibilities by ordering
the ministry to execute a military-style pandemic-relief operation
domestically. The Kremlin had not used the MoD for domestic humanitarian relief
prior to the COVID-19 pandemic because Russia’s regional leaders, various
federal agencies, and domestic ministries – such as the Ministry of Health,
Ministry of Internal Affairs, and Ministry of Emergency Situations – historically
handled disaster relief inside Russia.
The MoD began its domestic campaign
by creating an operational-level headquarters with jurisdiction across all of
Russia’s existing military districts to respond to the virus on March 12.[8]
The Kremlin supplied this new headquarters with 2.29 billion rubles in
additional funding on April 13.[9]
The MoD announced the mobilization of 30,000 personnel in 17 newly formed
military medical units comprised of reassigned military medical personnel to
combat COVID-19 domestically on April 24.[10]
The MoD additionally completed construction of 16 new COVID-19 treatment
centers across Russia and announced plans to build eight more on May 15.[11]
The MoD’s new operational structures could provide a basis for the MoD to
engage in societal control activities in the future, although there is no
evidence that the Kremlin plans to use them in such a fashion at this time. The
Kremlin’s retention or consolidation of these structures even after the
pandemic eases would indicate that the Kremlin was using the COVID-19 crisis to
set conditions for the MoD to assist with societal control.
The Kremlin imposed greater limitations
on public protests in part to mitigate protests against the July 1 vote on
constitutional amendments. Russian internal security officials
characterized the July 1 national voting as a success with minimal disruptions.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) claimed it registered 839 voting violation reports, such as voting fraud or
voting restriction, but zero “serious” violations during the voting thanks to
the efforts of more than 185,000 MVD personnel.[12]
Russia’s Central Elections Commission thanked the MVD for ensuring “complete
safety” at polling places on July 1.[13]
Rosgvardia deployed crowd control personnel and prisoner transport vehicles in
response to several hundred protesters in Pushkin Square in Moscow on July 1
but did not arrest protesters at that demonstration.[14]
Russian authorities arrested at least 25 protesters across Russia on July 1.[15]
The relative paucity of protests,
the small size of those reported, and the relatively few arrests reported may
reflect the successful deterrent effect of pre-vote laws and regulations. Putin enacted amendments to Russia’s Criminal
Code on April 1 to establish criminal liability, including imprisonment for up
to four years, for violating voting laws during the July 1 voting.[16]
Article 141 of Russia’s Criminal Code criminalizes the obstruction of the exercise
of voting rights. Russian authorities could invoke this provision to justify
the prosecution of any protester against the July 1 vote by claiming protest
activity physically obstructed Russians’ ability to participate in voting. [17]
The State Duma’s website also published a bill that is likely to pass expanding
Russian police's search and seizure powers and shielding police from criminal liability
on May 13.[18]
Russia’s Constitutional Court strengthened
Russia’s restrictions on public demonstrations by banning protests that occur
outside specially designated areas called “Hyde parks” on June 4.[19]
The court’s ruling effectively bans protests by relegating small demonstrations
to unsafe locations on a city’s periphery, such as deserted parks and
industrial zones.[20] No
more than 100 people may gather for demonstrations in Hyde parks without
government approval.[21]
The Kremlin is expanding its digital surveillance capabilities
and is using Moscow as a testing ground. Moscow city authorities deployed
facial recognition software and announced the use of QR codes for quarantine
control on February 21 and April 1, respectively.[22]
Healthy individuals in Moscow could leave home only if they obtained and
scanned QR codes notifying authorities of their movement and COVID-19 outpatients
had to use smartphones to regularly send geolocated pictures of themselves to
demonstrate compliance with stay-at-home orders.[23]
The Kremlin adopted the QR code enforcement technology across Russia after
implementing the system in Moscow. At least 21 of Russia’s 85 federal administrative
territories had announced plans to use the QR code system as of April 22.[24]
Rosgvardia arrested a man in Moscow who evaded law enforcement for over two
months after violating quarantine in Orenburg – a city in central Russia near
the Russia-Kazakhstan border. [25]
The arrest demonstrates that the Kremlin’s combined societal control tools are
capable of tracking and apprehending individuals even if they relocate across
the country. The Kremlin’s combined control tools registered approximately
400,000 quarantine violations throughout Russia between April and June.[26]
The Kremlin is making a country-wide push to expand digital
control tools. The Kremlin used the COVID-19 pandemic to test its first country-wide
deployment of QR codes for societal control. The pandemic response marked the
first time Moscow city authorities used facial recognition in conjunction with
mass national guard deployments and stay-at-home orders. Putin enacted a law on
May 23 allowing remote voting via mail and the internet in presidential and
parliamentary elections, potentially enabling the Kremlin to monitor
individual’s voting records and better conceal evidence of the Kremlin’s
manipulation of domestic election data.[27]
Putin also enacted a law creating a unified register of information for Russian
citizens on June 8.[28]
This database will store approximately 30 types of information, including
passport data, marital status, taxpayer identification codes, family relations,
and “other information.”[29]
Russian newspaper Vedomosti reported the Russian Department of Education
decided to equip all 43,000 Russian schools with a facial recognition
surveillance system reportedly named “Orwell” on June 15.[30]
The Orwell system, if implemented, will collect close to 100 percent of the
faces of Russia’s youth aged 6 through 18, thus enabling the Kremlin to have a
facial recognition database of almost all Russian citizens within two
generations.
The Kremlin is tightening control over Russia’s
information space to control narratives inside Russia and shape narratives the West
sees about Russia. The Kremlin’s steps to grow its influence over the information
space in the first half of 2020 included blocking websites contradicting Kremlin
narratives, creating a working group on combatting “fake news” on COVID-19 in
Russia, harassing Western journalists in Russia, and investigating “fake news”
and “foreign interference” targeting the national vote on July 1.[31]
The Kremlin likely seeks to suppress criticism of its poor domestic response to
the pandemic and Putin’s constitutional amendments. The Kremlin is likely preparing
to frame any domestic resistance to Putin’s power grab as part of a Western
subversion campaign.
Forecast: The Kremlin’s societal control tools will be long-lasting despite being introduced as part of Russia’s COVID-19 response. Putin seeks to revive Soviet-style internal policing and societal control to suppress his opponents. Putin’s police state will have greater surveillance capabilities than the Soviet system by marrying big data and 21st century information with the Kremlin’s existing authoritarian governance. Putin will implement digital surveillance technology for societal control on a wide scale and increasingly rely on draconian tactics, such as digital surveillance, facial recognition, and stricter and more discriminate policing against reformers and regime critics, to preserve his regime. Putin’s digital surveillance state will diminish the political freedoms Russians gained immediately after the fall of the Soviet Union. Overt political dissidence in Russia will likely become increasingly dangerous as surveillance capabilities and Kremlin-backed assassinations and arrests against domestic opponents increase. The Kremlin’s decision to embrace technologically enabled political repression will further isolate Russian political culture from that of democratic states and will stifle the development of sustainable political institutions in Russia, even in the post-Putin era.
[1] [“Police
and Russian National Guard Deploy Forces to Pushkin Square,”] Echo of Moscow,
July 1, 2020, https://echo.msk(.)ru/news/2669383-echo.html;
[“More Than 185 Thousand Employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Ensure Security
at Polling Stations,”] Russian Agency of Legal and Court Information, July
1, 2020, http://www.rapsinews(.)ru/news/20200701/305987818.html.
[2] Andrew Higgins, “Russia’s Highest Court Opens Way for Putin
to Rule until 2036,” The New York Times, March 16, 2020, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/16/world/europe/russia-putin-president-for-life.html.
[3] Kristina Zhukovа, [“Russia Enforces Total
Quarantine,”] Forbes, March 31, https://www.forbes(.)ru/tehnologii/396469-rossiya-vvodit-totalnyy-karantin-princ-charlz-vyzdorovel-evrope-skoro-stanet ; Anastasia Kornya,
Elena Muhametshina, Bela Lyauv,
Svetlana Bocharova, Aleksei Nicholski, [“Sobyanin’s Decree
on Complete Self-Isolation Aroused Serious Doubts among Lawyers,”] Vedomosti,
March 30, https://www.vedomosti(.)ru/politics/articles/2020/03/30/826618-ukaz-sobyanina ; [“Police
and National Guard will Control Novosibirsk COVID Quarantine,”] Novosibirsk
News, March 31, 2020, https://www.nsktv(.)ru/news/obshchestvo/politsiya_i_rosgvardiya_budut_nakazyvat_narushiteley_novosibirskogo_covid_karantina_310320201705/ ; [““Order
Will be Developed in the next Day or Two”: Self-Isolation in Tatarstan,”] Business Online,
March 30, https://www.business-gazeta(.)ru/article/463236 ;
Sergei Kiselyov, “Moscow Orders Citywide Quarantine Starting on March
30,” The Moscow Times, March 30, 2020, https://www.themoscowtimes(.)com/2020/03/29/moscow-orders-citywide-quarantine-starting-march-30-a69789 ; [“Krasnodar Territory was the first in the
South of Russia to Introduce Quarantine”], Интерфакс, March 31, 2020, https://tourism.interfax(.)ru/ru/news/articles/68478/ ; [“Self-Isolation
Regime Introduced in Stavropol Territory,”] Caucuses Realities, March
31 2020, https://www.kavkazr(.)com/a/30520088.html ; [“Hospitals
and Shopping Centers: How they will work in Tomsk on the first weekday of
vacation,”] ТV2, March 30, 2020, https://tv2(.)today/News/Kak-v-tomske-rabotayut-glavnye-gorodskie-sluzhby.
[5] [“Monthly Salary Increases
were Established for the Complexity of the Tasks Performed
by Employees of a Number of Departments of
the Internal Affairs Bodies, Military Personnel and Employees
of the Russian National Guard,”] Russian Government, January
24, 2020, http://government(.)ru/docs/38839/.
[6] Alexander Ershov, “Why are there
so few Reported COVID-19 Cases in Russia?,” Meduza,
March 6, 2020, https://meduza(.)io/en/feature/2020/03/06/why-are-there-so-few-reported-covid-19-cases-in-russia.
[7] [“Meeting with Director of the Federal Service of the
National Guard Troops Viktor Zolotov,”] Kremlin, May 6, 2020, http://kremlin(.)ru/events/president/news/63302.
[8] [“Defense Ministry sets up Headquarters to Prevent the Spread
of Coronavirus,”] Тass, March 20, 2020, https://tass(.)ru/armiya-i-opk/8034263.
[9] [“Order of the Government of the Russian Federation of 04.13.2020
No. 1006-r,”] Official Internet Portal of Legal Information, April
13, 2020, http://publication.pravo.gov(.)ru/Document/View/0001202004140032.
[10] [“Shoigu Announced Vorobyov’s Request to
Help Fight the Virus in the Moscow Region,”] RBK, April 24, 2020, https://www.rbc((.))ru/society/24/04/2020/5ea2e0609a7947b3fa0a6d1b.
[11] [“The Minister of Defense Reported to the Supreme
Commander on Measures Taken by
the Military by Department to Prevent the Spread of Coronavirus Infection,”] Ministry
of Defense of the Russian Federation, May 15, 2020, https://function.mil(.)ru/news_page/country/more.htm?id=12292555@egNews&_print=true.
[12]
[“Ministry of Internal Affairs: No Serious Violations Were Recorded at the All-Russian
Vote,”] Federal News Agency, July 1, 2020, https://riafan(.)ru/1289934-mvd-sereznykh-narushenii-na-obsherossiiskom-golosovanii-ne-zafiksirovano.
[13]
[“Ministry of Internal Affairs: No Serious Violations Were Recorded at the All-Russian
Vote,”] Federal News Agency, July 1, 2020, https://riafan(.)ru/1289934-mvd-sereznykh-narushenii-na-obsherossiiskom-golosovanii-ne-zafiksirovano.
[14]
[“Police and Russian National Guard Deploy Forces to Pushkin Square,”] Echo
of Moscow, July 1, 2020, https://echo.msk(.)ru/news/2669383-echo.html;
[“More Than 185 Thousand Employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Ensure Security
at Polling Stations,”] Russian Agency of Legal and Court Information, July
1, 2020, http://www.rapsinews(.)ru/news/20200701/305987818.html
; [“Opponents of Amendments to the Constitution Gathered on Pushkin Square in
Moscow,”] Echo of Moscow, July 1, 2020, https://echo.msk(.)ru/news/2669439-echo.html;
Ilya Barabahov Twitter, July 1, 2020, https://twitter(.)com/barabanch/status/1278301717730385920.
[15]
[“List of Detainees on Voting Day on Constitutional Amendments July 1, 2020,”] OVD-Info,
July 1, 2020, https://ovdinfo(.)org/news/2020/07/01/spisok-zaderzhannyh-v-den-golosovaniya-po-popravkam-v-konstituciyu-1-iyulya-2020.
[16] [“Federal Law of 01.04.2020 No. 90-FZ On Amendments to the
Code of the Russian Federation on Administrative Offenses,”] Official
Internet Portal of Legal Information, April 1, 2020, http://publication.pravo.gov(.)ru/Document/View/0001202004010048?index=0&rangeSize=1; [“Federal
Law of 01.04.2020 No. 94-FZ On Amending the Criminal Code of the Russian
Federation,”] Official Internet Portal of Legal Information, April
1, 2020, http://publication.pravo.gov(.)ru/Document/View/0001202004010052?index=0&rangeSize=1; [“Putin
Signed Laws Punishing Constitution Voting Violations”] Tass,
April 1, 2020, https://tass(.)ru/politika/8134437; [“Putin
Approved Punishment for Violations of the Constitutional Vote,”] Ria, April
1, 2020, ttps://ria(.)ru/20200401/1569451636.html; Kira Latuhina,[“Punishment Imposed for
Voting Violations on Constitutional Amendments,”] Rossiskaya Gazeta, April
1, 2020, https://rg(.)ru/2020/04/01/ustanovleno-nakazanie-za-narusheniia-pri-golosovanii-po-popravkam-k-konstitucii.html.
[17] [“Federal Law of 01.04.2020 N 94-F3 On Amendments to the
Criminal Code of the Russian Federation,”] PPT, April 1,
2020, https://ppt(.)ru/docs/fz/94-fz-231347.
[18] The bill
stipulates allowing police officers to enter residential and private property,
land, and territories to detain suspects fleeing the scene of a crime. The bill
grants police new authority to open a vehicle and detain people in the vehicle
if they committed a crime and protects officers from liability for harm caused
to citizens and legal entities when opening a vehicle. The law also gives
officers the ability to cordon off the territory of residential buildings,
structures, and other facilities with the consent of the head of the regional
Ministry of Internal Affairs. The bill also protects police from liability for
actions committed while on duty. “A police officer shall not be prosecuted for
actions committed in the performance of duties assigned to the police, and in
connection with the exercise of the rights granted to the police..." [No. 955380-7 On Amending the Federal Law “On Police” (Aimed
at Strengthening Guarantees of Protecting the Rights
of Citizens and Clarifying the Powers of
the Police,”] State Duma, May 20, 2020, https://sozd.duma.gov(.)ru/bill/955380-7.
[19] [“Resolution of the Constitutional
Court of the Russian Federation,”] Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation,
June 4, 2020, http://doc.ksrf(.)ru/decision/KSRFDecision473126.pdf ;
Anna Pushkarskaya, [“The Constitutional Court of
Russia ordered Rallies to be Held only in
Hyde Parks,”] BBC Russian Service, June 9, 2020, https://www.bbc(.)com/russian/features-52973314.
[20] [“Hyde Parks are not the only Place for Protests,”]
Moscow Helsinki Group, June 16, 2020, https://mhg(.)ru/gayd-parki-ne-edinstvennoe-mesto-dlya-protestov; Ivan Alexandrov,
[“Russia: Protestors Driven into Reservations,”] Eurasianet, June
23, 2020, https://russian.eurasianet(.)org/%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%81%D0%B8%D1%8F-%D0%BF%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%82%D0%B5%D1%81%D1%82%D1%83%D1%8E%D1%89%D0%B8%D1%85-%D0%B7%D0%B0%D0%B3%D0%BE%D0%BD%D1%8F%D1%8E%D1%82-%D0%B2-%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B7%D0%B5%D1%80%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%B8; Mikhail Suprenenko, [“Voronezh Social Activists Demand
that Authorities make Lenin Square a Hyde Park,”] Voronezh
Time, April 15, 2019, https://vrntimes(.)ru/articles/politika-i-vlast/voronezhskie-obshchestvenniki-potrebuyut-ot-vlastey-sdelat-ploshchad.
[21] [“Hyde Parks are not the only Place for Protests,”]
Moscow Helsinki Group, June 16, 2020, https://mhg(.)ru/gayd-parki-ne-edinstvennoe-mesto-dlya-protestov; Ivan Alexandrov,
[“Russia: Protestors Driven into Reservations,”] Eurasianet, June
23, 2020, https://russian.eurasianet(.)org/%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%81%D0%B8%D1%8F-%D0%BF%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%82%D0%B5%D1%81%D1%82%D1%83%D1%8E%D1%89%D0%B8%D1%85-%D0%B7%D0%B0%D0%B3%D0%BE%D0%BD%D1%8F%D1%8E%D1%82-%D0%B2-%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B7%D0%B5%D1%80%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%B8; Mikhail Suprenenko, [“Voronezh Social Activists Demand
that Authorities make Lenin Square a Hyde Park,”] Voronezh
Time, April 15, 2019, https://vrntimes(.)ru/articles/politika-i-vlast/voronezhskie-obshchestvenniki-potrebuyut-ot-vlastey-sdelat-ploshchad.
[22] Sergey Sobyanin, [“In Moscow They Began Using
a Face Recognition System
to Control Quarantine for Coronavirus,”] Meduza, February 20,
2020, https://meduza(.)io/news/2020/02/21/v-moskve-nachali-ispolzovat-sistemu-raspoznavaniya-lits-dlya-kontrolya-karantina-po-koronavirusu; Clara Minak and
Andrey Zlobin, [“Moscow Will Begin to use QR Codes
to Monitor Compliance with Self-isolation,”] Forbes,
March 31, 2020, https://www.forbes(.)ru/newsroom/obshchestvo/396395-moskv-nachnet-ispolzovat-qr-kody-dlya-kontrolya-za-soblyudeniem.
[23][“Head of Moscow Mayor Office Department
Eduard Lisenko Speaks about Social Monitoring Systems in
Russia”] Znak, June 4, 2020, https://www.znak(.)com/2020-04-01/vlasti_moskvy_rasskazali_kak_budet_rabotat_prilozhenie_dlya_slezhki_za_zarazhennymi_covid_19; [“Moscow Government Promised
to Issue Smartphones to Patients with COVID 19,”] RBK, June 24,
2020, https://www.rbc(.)ru/rbcfreenews/5e8434029a794733f87f1dfd.
[24] [“Federal Platform
for Issuing Digital Passes Will be Implemented in
21 Constituent Entities of the Russian Federation,"] Russian
Digital Ministry, April 22, 2020, https://digital.gov(.)ru/ru/events/39786/.
[25]
[“A Man Wanted in the Orenburg Region for Quarantine Violation was Detained in
Moscow,”] Tass, June 30, 2020, https://tass(.)ru/proisshestviya/8849645.
[26] [“Russians are Fined for Violation
of Self-Isolation by a Billion Rubles,”] Ekhokavkaza, June
24, 2020, https://www.ekhokavkaza(.)com/a/30673694.html.
[27] Russia’s State
Duma also passed legislation to allow remote voting in presidential and
parliamentary elections on May 13, 2020. The legislation allows votes to be
mailed in or processed on the Internet. The legislation allows Russia’s Central
Election Commission to determine when remote voting is necessary. However,
United Russia MP Dmitry Vyatkin said remote voting will not be permitted for
Russia’s pending plebiscite on constitutional amendments. Remote voting may
allow for increased election fraud to occur to support United Russia and
Putin’s regime, although the legislation is intended to grant Russian citizens
access to participate in major elections despite quarantine conditions or other
unforeseen events. [“Russian Federation, Federal Law
on Changes on Certain Law Acts”] State Duma, May 13, 2020, https://sozd.duma.gov(.)ru/bill/912249-7.
[28] [“Russian Federation, Federal Law about
the Unified Federal Information Register Containing Information
on the Population of the Russian Federation,”] State Duma, March
02, 2020, http://publication.pravo.gov(.)ru/Document/View/0001202006080019.
[29] [“Russian FNS Proposed Including the Income
of Every Family in Special Register,”] Interfax, April 16,
2020 https://www.interfax(.)ru/business/704596.
[30] [“Smart Cameras Will be Watching
Russian School Students,”] Vedomosti, June 15, 2020, https://www.vedomosti(.)ru/technology/articles/2020/06/15/832652-umnie-kameri-budut-sledit?utm_source=yxnews&utm_medium=desktop&utm_referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fyandex(.)ru%2Fnews.
[31] [“Roskomnadzor Blocked the Website of the
Campaign Against Constitutional Changes,”] Novaya Gazeta,
March 12, 2020, https://novayagazeta(.)ru/news/2020/03/12/159727-roskomnadzor-zablokiroval-sayt-kampanii-protiv-vneseniya-popravok-v-konstitutsiyu ; [“Russian Investigative Committee Create
a Special Working Group Against the Spread
of False Information Regarding Coronavirus,”] Sledcom,
March 26, 2020, https://sledcom(.)ru/news/item/1451926/ ; [“Russian Authorities Detain Doctor who Exposed Flaws
in COVID-19 Response,”] Amnesty, April 3, 2020, https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2020/04/russia-authorities-detain-doctor-who-exposed-flaws-in-covid19-response/ ; [“Roskomnadzor
Blocked the Website of the Ministry of Integration of Ukraine,”] RBK, June 24,
2020, https://www.rbc(.)ua/rus/news/roskomnadzor-zablokiroval-sayt-minreintegratsii-1587397175.html ; [“The Civil Chamber of the Russian Federation will
Send Data on Fakes About Voting to the Duma and Federation Council Commission,”] TASS,
June 9, 2020 https://tass(.)ru/politika/8683307 ; Daria Litvinova, “Russia Slams
New York Times, Financial Times on Virus Deaths,” ABC News, May 14, 2020, https://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/russia-calls-nyt-ft-retract-stories-virus-toll-70676319 ; “Russia Demands
Apology from Bloomberg Over Report About Putin’s Low
Ratings,” Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, June 25, 2020, https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-demands-apology-from-bloomberg-over-report-about-putin-s-low-ratings/30633150.html.