onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Notification
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Reading: Exiled Russian Journalists Face Growing Threats in Europe
Share
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Search
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.
News

Exiled Russian Journalists Face Growing Threats in Europe

Last updated: May 13, 2025 8:00 pm
Oliver James
Share
8 Min Read
Exiled Russian Journalists Face Growing Threats in Europe
SHARE

PARIS—Maya Korolev is bustling around Reforum Space Paris, one of several professional video studios run by the Free Russia Foundation throughout Europe. As the studio supervisor, she’s preparing to record a program for Doxa, an independent Russian media outlet in exile. Cables snake around tripods, and the spotlights suspended from the ceiling flood the set with bright light.

“Some of the media in exile couldn’t survive without our support,” says Korolev (a pseudonym), noting that the Free Russia Foundation provides not only studio space but video equipment and staff to operate it. “Every day, videos shot here accumulate hundreds of thousands of views in Russia, bypassing censorship thanks to VPNs. It’s easier to work here without censorship.”

Le Monde estimates that there are at least 1,500 Russian journalists working in exile, many of whom left their home country after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. Russia, which Reporters Without Borders (RSF) ranks 162nd out of 180 countries for press freedom, has banned almost all free press and all journalists are subject to censorship. According to RSF, the media “must follow orders issued by the president’s office regarding subjects to be avoided, and must censor themselves closely.” A law enacted on March 4, 2022 spells out a 15-year prison sentence for anyone spreading false information about operations in Ukraine—and false information means any information that does not fit in with the Kremlin’s official narrative.

While Russian journalists can work more freely outside of their home country, they face a different set of challenges while in exile. Some have been subject to international arrest warrants or convicted in absentia of being “foreign agents.” A bigger concern at the moment, though, is funding. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced on March 10 that his department was canceling 83 percent of U.S. Agency for International Development contracts—and RSF has noted the cancellation affected $268 million that had been allocated by Congress to support independent media.

“Our biggest problem today is the Trump administration,” says Korolev. “It has created a terrible situation and caused us major financial difficulties for the future.” The consequences of the freeze are immediate: “Many independent newsrooms have had to lay off almost 15 percent of their staff,” explains Jeanne Cavelier, Russia manager at RSF.

More bad news came just five days later, on March 15: The Trump administration announced the end of funding for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. “Radio Liberty was an essential source for us,” laments Olga Kokorina, co-founder of the Russie-Liberté association, which supports Russian journalists in Paris. “They were doing an incredible job,” she says.

RFE/RL are still broadcasting, albeit in a diminished capacity as legal challenges work their way through the courts. Most recently, an appeals court ruled that the administration had to release $12 million in funding for RFE/RL that had been frozen, but there could be further appeals.

The administration’s efforts to freeze funding are part of a wider retreat by the West in the international battle for information, as the Russians and Chinese go on the offensive. Eight Western nations—the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Canada, Japan, Australia, and Switzerland—have significant government-backed international media operations. As with RFE/RL and Voice of America, these outlets have a mission of providing balanced and verified information to combat misinformation.

Denis Kataev

But against a backdrop of growing budget deficits and deliberate funding cuts, most are suffering financially. The BBC World Service, the largest operation besides Voice of America, has cut hundreds of jobs since 2022. France Médias Monde, which operates France 24, Radio France Internationale, and Monte Carlo Doualiya, has reduced its workforce by 20 percent in the last 16 years, with major layoffs in 2009, 2012, and 2021. Budget cuts continue to affect France’s public broadcasting system.

In total, eight main Western international media, based on their latest annual reports, have a collective budget of $2.1 billion. The budgets of the Russian and Chinese media are particularly opaque, as the figures are not public, but the Public Media Alliance, an association for the defense of public media, estimates their combined expenditures to be between $6 billion and $8 billion.

When the BBC shut down its Arabic-language radio service in Lebanon in 2023, its frequencies were swiftly taken over by Russian state media—RT (formerly Russia Today) and Sputnik, the latter banned in Europe since the launch of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Far from hiding its intentions, Moscow seems to relish the provocation, as Arab News noted at the time:

“Back in 1938, when the BBC first launched its radio (service) in Lebanon, it chose the slogan ‘This is London’ as its opening line. Now the news bulletin starts with ‘This is Moscow,’” said Dmitry Tarasov, the chairman of Sputnik Radio in Lebanon.

This information war translates into a relentless struggle for Russian journalists in exile, hampering their ability to reach their audience and making it difficult to overcome censorship and to counter propaganda.

In her cramped office, where the shelves are lined with Chekhov’s works and the writings of the late Russian dissident leader Alexei Navalny, Kokorina tries to shed light on the daily struggle of the independent media. “These media did incredible work, and they are the first to be targeted by the Russian regime,” she says, her voice grave.

Added to these financial difficulties is the Kremlin’s growing transnational repression. Exile guarantees neither security nor anonymity. “There are open prosecutions against some of us,” says Inna Denisova of the Russian newspaper Republic. She has lived in exile in France since 2022. “We’re systematically targeted by international arrest warrants. … I can’t go home now, my articles have been passed on to the FSB.”

Jeanne Cavelier of RSF told me that two exiled journalists believe they were poisoned and that others are under surveillance.

Denis Kataev, a presenter for TV Rain, one of the main opposition TV channels in exile, has lived in France since March 2022. He says that he senses the presence of informers on the Kremlin’s payroll in France.  “I know that some people around me write reports for Moscow about my activities here,” he says calmly.

While the fear of being hounded never quite disappears, Kataev refuses to be paralyzed. “You can’t work if you’re paranoid,” he says. “So we carry on. Discreetly, but we carry on.”

Behind his clubmaster glasses, his eyes sparkle with optimism. “Russian society needs a paradigm shift. And to do that, it’s essential to provide it with true, reliable and independent information.”

Read more at The Dispatch

The Dispatch is a new digital media company providing engaged citizens with fact-based reporting and commentary, informed by conservative principles. Sign up for free.

You Might Also Like

What is the No 1 killer of college-age people in US? Data says gun violence | Gun Violence News

Three rebels, one Indian soldier killed in Kashmir gun battles | Politics News

US consumer spending surges in March, inflation cools

WATCH: Pritzker signs laws aimed at attracting Illinois students to state colleges

Nepal village ravaged by 2015 earthquake now a reluctant tourist hotspot | Earthquakes News

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Share
Previous Article Trump’s tariffs have launched global trade wars. Here’s a timeline of how we got here Trump’s tariffs have launched global trade wars. Here’s a timeline of how we got here
Next Article Supreme Court revives suit against cop who fatally shot driver stopped for unpaid tolls Supreme Court revives suit against cop who fatally shot driver stopped for unpaid tolls

Latest News

Why the next app for relationships won’t look like a dating app, according to a VC
Why the next app for relationships won’t look like a dating app, according to a VC
Tech July 9, 2025
Vance plans to kick off admin efforts to tout Trump’s agenda bill with Pennsylvania visit
Vance plans to kick off admin efforts to tout Trump’s agenda bill with Pennsylvania visit
News July 9, 2025
Worried about extreme weather? Home insurance can provide a financial lifeline
Worried about extreme weather? Home insurance can provide a financial lifeline
Finance July 9, 2025
The White House just took its most aggressive stance yet against Jerome Powell
The White House just took its most aggressive stance yet against Jerome Powell
Finance July 9, 2025
//
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.