The Russian state television journalist who took a dramatic stand against President Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine during a live broadcast says it was ...
"Unfortunately, for the past few years, I have been working on Channel One and doing Kremlin propaganda, and now I am very ashamed of it," she said in the video. So I moved very quickly and I passed by the security and showed my poster," said Ovsyannikova. She was "afraid until the last minute," she added. by a district court in Moscow of organizing an "unauthorized public event." This man is Vladimir Putin," Ovsyannikova said. "It's a shame that I allowed to speak lies from the TV screens, ashamed that I allowed to zombify Russian people."
Kevin Paffrath, who goes by Meet Kevin, on the streaming site, told Fox News he would be willing to pay up to 1 million rubles to the journalist.
I am ashamed that I let the Russian people be zombified. I am ashamed that I’ve allowed the lies to be said on the TV screens. It's what we need to help wake up that middle and older age group in Russia that's brainwashed by the Russian media, who actually think that this is some form of liberation for Ukrainians."
Marina Ovsyannikova staged a protest on Monday on Russian news network Channel One. She was detained after shouting during the segment: “Stop the war. No to war ...
Navalny also spoke out and described Ovsyannikova as “wonderful”. Speaking in court on Tuesday, the Kremlin opposition leader said: “You can’t imprison everyone. Ovsyannikova claimed she was “denied access to a lawyer” and was not allowed to contact her family or friends after being detained. “To those who are not afraid to protest, while your country has not yet closed itself off from the whole world. “Ashamed that I was allowed to tell lies from the television screen. It carries the maximum sentence of 15 years in jail. According to state media reports, Ovsyannikova was born in Odesa in 1978 and has two children.
Fine of about £215 is relatively light sentence for protest that shocked Russian TV viewers and earned plaudits from western leaders.
Lawyers said it was still possible that prosecutors would press tougher charges against Ovsyannikova, but that it was less likely following Tuesday’s hearing.“There are still risks that a criminal case will be opened against Ovsyannikova, but the chances of that have sharply decreased after the fine that she received today,” said Pavel Chikov, the head of Agora International Human Rights Group. “She has been fined not for her performance, but for her video message in which she urged people to protest.”“No case has been opened yet against her performance, and the prosecutor’s office might still decide to do so,” he continued. We know there is no substitute for being there – and we’ll stay on the ground, as we did during the 1917 revolution, the Ukrainian famine of the 1930s, the collapse of 1991 and the first Russo-Ukrainian conflict in 2014. Reporting like this is vital to establish the facts, who is lying and who is telling the truth. In a photograph alongside a lawyer, she appeared unharmed and was wearing the same outfit and necklace in the colours of the Ukrainian flag as a day earlier.The Kremlin had suggested that Ovsyannikova had violated laws on hooliganism that can carry a sentence of years in prison. “And the Kremlin wouldn’t have a ready template for how to react.”Several prominent journalists have reportedly left their positions at state media since Ovsyannikova’s protest.“I’m interested by the amount of discontent inside of the system,” said Stanovaya. “Either right now this wave comes to nothing. She was detained on Tuesday evening after running on to the set of the evening news with a poster that read: “Stop the war. “But, the fact that she has already received a quick punishment indicates that a political decision has been made not to persecute her further.”Tatiana Stanovaya, a political analyst and founder of R Politik, said that there were probably differing views among Kremlin advisers about how to deal with Ovsyannikova’s case. Emmanuel Macron of France even offered her consular “protection” and said he would raise her case with Vladimir Putin.In a legal twist, Ovsyannikova was fined not for breaking onto the Channel One set but for a video statement she made before the protest in which she said she was “ashamed” of having worked at Channel One and spreading “Kremlin propaganda”.“These were indeed some of the hardest days of my life,” she told reporters following the short hearing. It’s our job at the Guardian to decipher a rapidly changing landscape, particularly when it involves a mounting refugee crisis and the risk of unthinkable escalation. While some may have lobbied for a tough response, others could have feared a backlash if the mother of two was treated too harshly.“Nobody was ready for something like this ahead of time,” she said. Photograph: AFP/Getty ImagesA Russian court has fined Marina Ovsyannikova 30,000 roubles (£215) for violating protest laws after she broke onto a live news broadcast on Channel One in an extraordinary demonstration against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The fine was a relatively light sentence for an act of protest that shocked Russian television viewers and earned plaudits from western leaders. I was in a fairly difficult position.” She also said she wasn’t surprised at her release because she had two children.Friends and supporters feared the worst after Ovsyannikova disappeared into police custody for nearly 24 hours after her arrest, suspecting that prosecutors may be preparing serious criminal charges against her.
A Russian television presenter, who staged an on-air protest over her country's invasion of Ukraine has said she has no plans to flee, despite fears for her ...
In Russian, it said: "NO WAR. Stop the war. repeatedly and could still be heard after the broadcast was switched to an alternative output. It is not clear if she will face other, more serious, charges.
Marina Ovsyannikova don show for court for Moscow afta her lawyers say she bin dey miss all night appears in court in Moscow after lawyers said she was ...
Plenti independent media outlets don stop broadcast or publishing afta authorities for Russia apply pressure five dem. Ms Ovsyannikova, wey say her papa na Ukrainian bin tell Russians make dem protest against di war, say na only dem fit "stop di madness". She say, "I dey shame say I let myself tell lies for television, I dey shame say I allow Russians to turn to zombies." Dem also hear as she dey repeat, "no war, stop di war". Her lawyers bin say she dey miss afta dem bin dey find her throughout di night. Fear still dey say dem go fit still charge am for di more serious new criminal law wey ban calling Russia military action ofr Ukraine as "invasion" or spreading "fake news" about di kasala.