Russia has started enforcing its ban on ‘fake news.’ The first suspect? A woman protesting landfill pollution.
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Russian officials in Arkhangelsk have filed the country’s first police report against an individual for spreading illegal “fake news.” According to the news website 29.ru, the activist Elena Kalinina used her VKontakte account to promote an unpermitted protest against a local landfill. Police officers reasoned that demonstrations shouldn’t take place without city permits, meaning that Kalinina's information about the unpermitted protest’s time and location amounts to “fake news.”
According to the website Mediazona, which reports on Russia’s criminal-justice system, this is the first known enforcement of the new law against “fake news,” which took effect on March 29, 2019 — three days before Kalinina posted the rally information on VKontakte. Kalinina has already received three fines related to the same demonstration for a total of 47,000 rubles ($725).
(1) What is “fake news”?
According to the Duma’s legislation, it’s any unverified information presented as fact that “threatens someone’s life and (or) their health or property, or threatens mass public disorder or danger, or threatens to interfere or disrupt vital infrastructure, transport or social services, credit organizations, or energy, industrial, or communications facilities.”