Alerts | Censorship and regulation

Activatica, journalist Masha Mayers and Kseniya Kirillova designated as “foreign agents”

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On 11 July 2025, Russia’s Ministry of Justice designated Activatica, a news outlet reporting on civic activism, as well as journalist Masha Mayers, as “foreign agents”, Russian media reported.
Authorities in Moscow claimed that Activatica had disseminated “false information” about decisions made by Russian authorities, as well as “false information aimed at creating a negative image” of the Russian army. The news outlet was also accused of opposing Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine and of disseminating “LGBT propaganda”, among other accusations.
Mayers and Kirillova were accused of opposing Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, as well as of creating publicly available content for other “foreign agents”.

Initially adopted in 2012, Russia’s law on foreign agents has been revised several times over the past decade to include an ever-wider range of potential targets for state-sponsored discrimination. Currently, any organization, media or private individual can be designated as such simply by being declared to be “under foreign influence” by the Russian Ministry of Justice or because of receiving funds of any amount from abroad (or from an entity itself receiving foreign funds). “Foreign agents” are also barred from receiving state financing, teaching at state universities, working with minors and providing expertise on environmental issues, among other restrictions.

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