Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Russia critic Kara !
Current location:HOME >business >Russia critic Kara

Russia critic Kara

Time:2024-05-07 19:36:20 source:Stellar Scope news portal

NEW YORK (AP) — Vladimir Kara-Murza, who has written columns as a contributor for The Washington Post from his prison cell in Russia, has won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary.

Kara-Murza, 42, is a Russian politician, author and historian who has been imprisoned in Russia since April 2022. He was convicted of treason last year for denouncing the war in Ukraine.

He is serving 25 years, the most severe sentence given to a Kremlin critic in modern Russia. He is among a growing number of dissidents held in increasingly harsh conditions under President Vladimir Putin’s political crackdown.

The prize was awarded to Kara-Murza “for passionate columns written at great personal risk from his prison cell, warning of the consequences of dissent in Vladimir Putin’s Russia and insisting on a democratic future for his country,” according to the Pulitzer announcement on Monday.

Related information
  • Trump Media fires auditing firm that US regulators have charged with 'massive fraud'
  • How you CAN go on safari on a budget: From gorillas in Uganda to South African elephants
  • Delicious one
  • Mother who promised Taylor Swift tickets to her daughter to celebrate finishing her A
  • Double European weightlifting champion Pielieshenko killed in Ukraine war
  • Noah Eagle picked by NBC as play
  • Kansas' higher ed board is considering an anti
  • How ancient hatreds are reshaping the Middle East and forging unlikely alliances. The rise of Iran
Recommended content
  • The number of fish on US overfishing list reaches an all
  • Baby not on board! Mother with three
  • Duke's Jeremy Roach announces plans to enter NBA draft and transfer portal
  • The habits that add decades to your life
  • Coach Amorim vows to stay with Sporting Lisbon after winning another Portuguese league
  • The U.N. rights chief says eastern Congo's escalating violence is being forgotten by the world