Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 18
Alexander Sokurov, 74, Rebukes Russian Censorship at 50-Member Presidential Council
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 18

Alexander Sokurov, 74, Rebukes Russian Censorship at 50-Member Presidential Council

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 18

Summary

  • At a December meeting with Vladimir Putin, Alexander Sokurov used his seat on Russia’s presidential human rights council to denounce state repression, arts censorship and the branding of critics as “foreign agents.”
  • Sokurov, appointed to the 50-member advisory body in 2018, also questioned giving the children of Ukraine war veterans priority for scarce free places at elite state universities.
  • The intervention stood out because the council has been packed with pro-war loyalists, making his criticism a rare public challenge from inside an official Kremlin institution.
  • His position remains contested: some exiled Russian artists pushed the Venice Biennale to drop him as a speaker, arguing he represents tolerated dissent while harsher critics are jailed or driven abroad.

Insights

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