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Politics

Instagram bows to Russia censors

February 16, 2018

Instagram has removed posts related to Alexei Navalny's accounts of a meeting between a Russian deputy prime minister and billionaire tycoon. Russia's communications watchdog also blocked access to his website.

https://p.dw.com/p/2smLK
Alexei Navalny (on the right in the foreground) at the meeting of the Central Election Commission
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Sputnik/V. Melnikov

Russia's communications watchdog has said it asked photo sharing website Instagram to remove posts that allegedly show Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Prikhodko enjoying luxurious hospitality from billionaire tycoon Oleg Deripaska.

The site, which is owned by social media giant Facebook, obliged to the request on Thursday.

Read more: Alexei Navalny — 'There is no pro-Putin majority' in Russia

The videos and photographs formed part of an investigation published last week by Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, alleging that Prikhodko had vacationed on Deripaska's yacht off the coast of Norway. 

Prikhodko and Deripaska have denied the allegations.

Kremlin critic Navalny decried Instagram's decision to comply with Russian authorities. In a rare tweet posted in English, Navalny wrote: "@instagram decided to comply with Russian illegal censorship requests and deleted some content about oligarch Deripaska. Shame on you, @instagram! This content was spotlighted by our corruption investigation."

The videos were reportedly recorded and uploaded by a woman called Nastya Rybka, who said she was hired by a modelling agency to spend time on Deripaska's yacht. Rybka, who worked as an escort, also claimed she had an affair with the aluminum magnate.

A 25-minute video of Navalny presenting the investigation in Russian was also uploaded to YouTube last week, where it has already amassed some 5 million views.

As of Thursday, the video still remained online, although Russia's communications regulator Roskomnadzor said it had issued a request to Google to delete the video.

Read more: Russia's presidential election — What you need to know

Russian regulator blocks access to Navalny website

Also Thursday, Roskomnadzor  blocked access to Navalny's personal website, navalny.com, citing he had ignored a court order to take down material related to the meeting.

Deripaska reported the video to the authorities and won a court ruling on privacy grounds, forcing Navalny to take it down. Navalny refused and appealed the ruling.

Read more: Opinion — In Russia's election, words count more than action

In a statement, Deripaska insisted that his move to have the video taken down was "protect his right to privacy, and has nothing to do with any political struggle between Mr. Navalny and his political opponents."

Navalny, however, maintained the measures were designed to stifle his campaign to boycott next month's Russian presidential election, which he has labelled a sham vote. Navalny was barred from running against Russian President Vladimir Putin because of a criminal conviction, a ruling he says was also politically motivated.

The Russian opposition leader has also been informally barred from state media, relying instead on his website and social channels to spread his message.

His website has twice been blocked before, following demonstrations against Russia's annexation of the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in 2014 and after authorities reportedly found a section on his site calling for illegal protests in 2015.

DW Moscow correspondent Emily Sherwin on Putin's candidacy and the ban on Alexei Navalny

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