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Home»News»Global Free Speech»Journalist Aleksey Seregin detained in Russia’s Mari El Republic 
Global Free Speech

Journalist Aleksey Seregin detained in Russia’s Mari El Republic 

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Journalist Aleksey Seregin detained in Russia’s Mari El Republic 
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New York, June 5, 2026—Russian authorities must immediately release journalist Aleksey Seregin and stop silencing independent voices in the country, the Committee to Protect Journalists said on Friday.

On June 4, law enforcement officers in Yoshkar-Ola, the capital of Mari El Republic in western Russia, detained Seregin after beating him, confiscating his phone, and searching his home. The authorities took him for questioning to the local branch of Russia’s Investigative Committee, the law enforcement agency in charge of pretrial investigations. Seregin will be detained for at least 48 hours, according to independent, Russia-focused news outlet The Insider. 

According to independent news outlet 7×7, a regional newsroom, Seregin is being prosecuted for “justifying terrorism” because of a 2024 comment in a Telegram chat about former Soviet air force general Dzhokhar Dudayev, who led the Chechen independence movement in the 1990s and was killed in 1996. The authorities claimed the comment “justified illegal armed groups in Chechnya in the 1990s.”

“The detention of journalist Aleksey Seregin in Russia is further evidence of the authorities’ determination to crush what remains of independent local journalism in the country,” said Gulnoza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator. “Russian authorities must immediately release Aleksey Seregin and stop suppressing information they deem inconvenient.”

A source familiar with Seregin’s case told CPJ on the condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisal that his detention is retaliation for his journalism. 

He faces up to seven years in jail under Part 2, Article 205.2 of Russia’s Criminal Code. 

Seregin previously worked with multiple regional media outlets. Since 2017, he has been running the Telegram channel “Nothing Will Happen in Mari El,” which has over 860 subscribers and where he covers local issues, including trials, corruption, human rights, and the environment, and posts updates about local residents who have died in Russia’s war in Ukraine. 

“He is the only journalist in the republic who is active both in the media and in civil society,” a local activist from Mari El had told Idel.Realii, the Tatar-Bashkir service of U.S. Congress-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) on condition of anonymity, in a November 2025 interview. 

Over recent years, Seregin has repeatedly faced repression for his journalism and civic activities. The Russian Ministry of Justice designated Seregin a “foreign agent” in November 2024. In September 2025, he was fined 30,000 rubles (USD$380) for failing to list his designation. 

In addition to Seregin, Russia is currently holding at least 29 journalists in connection with their work.  

CPJ called Russia’s Investigative Committee’s branch in Mari El for comment but the call went unanswered.

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An unknown protestor stands in front of a tank in Tiananmen Square, 1989. Photo by: Jeff Widener/Associated Press/CC BY-NC 2.0 Could it be harder to commemorate the victims of the Tiananmen Square massacre yesterday – on its 37th anniversary – than last year when it was already incredibly hard? Apparently yes, and this applies to people outside China too. In Beijing itself, members of the Tiananmen Mothers group have reportedly been barred from visiting a cemetery where their children are buried in what is believed to be the first time in over three decades such commemorations have been stopped. In a statement published this week, the group said families were informed they’d not be allowed to hold any acts of remembrance at Wan’an Cemetery on 4 June. This feels supremely cruel and petty, but I guess I shouldn’t expect anything less from a government that commanded its troops to slay its own people. Commemorations beyond this are, of course, strictly forbidden within China. You are not going to see anything in Tiananmen Square. Indeed, and I’ve firsthand experience of this, it’s hard to get close to the square on 3 and 4 June. It used to be the case that people in Hong Kong could commemorate it. In 2014, a museum dedicated to the massacre opened. That, though, was closed years back. And as for the candles that were lit in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park year on year, they are no more, replaced instead by a… patriotic food festival. Even outside the Chinese Communist Party’s direct control it’s now more challenging to remember. The June Fourth Memorial Museum in Los Angeles was broken into and vandalised over the weekend. The museum was opened last June by Chinese dissidents and survivors, including student leader Wang Dan. This was clearly not some random act of destruction carried out by bored teens, given Beijing’s mastery of transnational repression and the date it happened. The CCP may very well have the last laugh. Anyone below the age of 30 growing up in China today likely hasn’t a clue that the words Tiananmen Square don’t just refer to the central Beijing landmark. Yes, you’ll see creative memes and puns coming out of the country as some try to bypass the censors. It’s just that they’re marginal and ultimately no match for the might of Beijing. All of which makes it more important to do what you can to remember. I personally like to revisit the Hunger Strike Declaration that we printed at the time. I like to look at the image of two people dancing in the square. Both remind me of the movement that came before the massacre. Yesterday, we also published a reflective piece from Lijia Zhang, the acclaimed Chinese writer who was part of the protests. Finally, we’ve lit candles ourselves. It’s a small act of resistance which literally keeps the flame of remembrance alive. READ MORE

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