A criminal case was opened against an engineer in a design bureau for the development and production of cruise missiles for an inscription, the contents of which were not disclosed. If there is any inscription, there is no confirmation.
The Russian independent TG channel Astra published several regular messages about the persecution in Russia of people who said or wrote “something wrong.” Even inscriptions on a keychain can serve as a reason for prosecution, as happened to an engineer from the Moscow region.
In Dubna, near Moscow, a criminal case was opened against the leading engineer of the design bureau for the development and production of cruise missiles, 46-year-old Sergei Krasyuk, for “discrediting” the Russian army for a key fob.
The reason for the criminal case was the inscriptions on the key fob for the key to the company’s phone storage safe. What kind of inscriptions they are and whether they actually exist is not reported.
Student Sergei Gulko, who wrote “Glory to Ukraine” on the social network, was expelled from Moscow State University. The student was ordered to leave Russia within three days.
According to the faculty press service, he allegedly collected money for the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
The faculty has no complaints about Sergei Gulko’s academic performance.
Sergey Gulko studied commerce as a foreign citizen – he has a Ukrainian passport, he is a young man from Odessa.
It was reported that in April he was imprisoned three times for disseminating information of a “nationalist” nature.

Sergey Gulko
And in the Altai Territory, a court fined local resident Roman Chernikov one thousand rubles for appearing in a public place wearing a cap with a trident – “the so-called trident of Vladimir the Great,” as reported of the Russian media.
In court, the man pleaded not guilty and explained that he considered the trident “a symbol of the Slavic deity,” but he was found guilty of displaying extremist symbols, and the cap was confiscated.

It was reported that in January 2024, the Ministry of Justice of the Russian Federation recognized the “trident of Prince Vladimir” as extremist, because “a similar symbol” is used on the flag of Ukraine.
Earlier, the Russian FSB announced the “detention of seven followers of the Russian Volunteer Corps in Moscow.”
Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.