-
Packers clinch NFL playoff spot as Lions lose to Vikings
-
Guinea's presidential candidates hold final rallies before Sunday's vote
-
Villa face Chelsea test as Premier League title race heats up
-
Spurs extend domination of NBA-best Thunder
-
Malaysia's Najib to face verdict in mega 1MDB graft trial
-
King Charles calls for 'reconciliation' in Christmas speech
-
Brazil's jailed ex-president Bolsonaro undergoes 'successful' surgery
-
UK tech campaigner sues Trump administration over US sanctions
-
New Anglican leader says immigration debate dividing UK
-
Russia says made 'proposal' to France over jailed researcher
-
Bangladesh PM hopeful Rahman returns from exile ahead of polls
-
Police suspect suicide bomber behind Nigeria's deadly mosque blast
-
AFCON organisers allowing fans in for free to fill empty stands: source
-
Mali coach Saintfiet hits out at European clubs, FIFA over AFCON changes
-
Last Christians gather in ruins of Turkey's quake-hit Antakya
-
Pope Leo condemns 'open wounds' of war in first Christmas homily
-
Mogadishu votes in first local elections in decades under tight security
-
'Starting anew': Indonesians in disaster-struck Sumatra hold Christmas mass
-
Cambodian PM's wife attends funerals of soldiers killed in Thai border clashes
-
Prime minister hopeful Tarique Rahman arrives in Bangladesh: party
-
Pacific archipelago Palau agrees to take migrants from US
-
Pope Leo expected to call for peace during first Christmas blessing
-
Australia opts for all-pace attack in fourth Ashes Test
-
'We hold onto one another and keep fighting,' says wife of jailed Istanbul mayor
-
North Korea's Kim visits nuclear subs as Putin hails 'invincible' bond
-
Trump takes Christmas Eve shot at 'radical left scum'
-
3 Factors That Affect the Cost of Dentures in San Antonio, TX
-
Leo XIV celebrates first Christmas as pope
-
Diallo and Mahrez strike at AFCON as Ivory Coast, Algeria win
-
'At your service!' Nasry Asfura becomes Honduran president-elect
-
Trump-backed Nasry Asfura declared winner of Honduras presidency
-
Diallo strikes to give AFCON holders Ivory Coast winning start
-
Spurs captain Romero facing increased ban after Liverpool red card
-
Bolivian miners protest elimination of fuel subsidies
-
A lack of respect? African football bows to pressure with AFCON change
-
Trump says comedian Colbert should be 'put to sleep'
-
Mahrez leads Algeria to AFCON cruise against Sudan
-
Southern California braces for devastating Christmas storm
-
Amorim wants Man Utd players to cover 'irreplaceable' Fernandes
-
First Bond game in a decade hit by two-month delay
-
Brazil's imprisoned Bolsonaro hospitalized ahead of surgery
-
Serbia court drops case against ex-minister over train station disaster
-
Investors watching for Santa rally in thin pre-Christmas trade
-
David Sacks: Trump's AI power broker
-
Delap and Estevao in line for Chelsea return against Aston Villa
-
Why metal prices are soaring to record highs
-
Stocks tepid in thin pre-Christmas trade
-
UN experts slam US blockade on Venezuela
-
Bethlehem celebrates first festive Christmas since Gaza war
-
Set-piece weakness costing Liverpool dear, says Slot
'Don't repeat our mistakes' - Russian writer Akunin warns against creeping repression
Russian author Boris Akunin, who was recently sentenced to a lengthy prison term in absentia after supporting Ukraine, warned other countries on Monday to be vigilant against creeping repression.
"Don't repeat our mistakes," the 69-year-old author told diplomats gathered at an event on the sidelines of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
Akunin, a longstanding critic of the Kremlin and its military offensive on Ukraine, was sentenced in July to 14 years behind bars after a Moscow military court found him guilty, among other things, of "aiding terrorist activity" with pro-Ukraine comments and "justifying terrorism" over a 2024 Telegram post in which he said he was "for revolution" in Russia.
Speaking alongside Belarusian Nobel Literature Prize winner Svetlana Alexievich, whose books have been banned in Russia, and two journalists who had previously been jailed there for their work, he described the slow "strangling of culture" that had been underway in the country for years.
Now, he warned, the same was starting "to happen in the United States of America as well".
"Don't let it happen."
The UN special rapporteur on the rights situation in Russia, Mariana Katzarova, told the rights council Monday that 50 media professionals are currently behind bars in the country, making it "the third-largest jailer of journalists in the world".
She described a country on an "alarming trajectory", with the state systematically restricting freedom of expression and other rights as it seeks "to crush civic space, silence the media, dismantle the legal profession, eliminate political opposition, suppress culture (and) distort historical truth".
Akunin stressed that the attack on free expression had begun in Russia long before it launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine three and a half years ago.
He pointed to how President Vladimir Putin, shortly after first coming to power in 2000, had gone after "one independent television channel".
Russians at the time had protested "too mildly, because we did not quite understand what was happening... It was just one TV channel", he said.
"We never thought that regression was possible," Akunin said, warning that countries that "have been democratic for many years" had been lulled into the same sense of complacency.
They "think that democracy is guaranteed. It is not", he said.
"We are living in a new reality... We are on the verge of a new Cold War".
Alexievich also painted a bleak picture of the situation.
"Democracy today is in retreat," the 2015 Nobel laureate told the gathering.
"It is clear that we are living in a different world, a new world," she said.
"I think we are doomed to live in this world for at least several generations".
M.Thompson--AMWN