From the BBC:
“Ukraine war: Russian pop
megastar Alla Pugacheva condemns conflict”
One of Russia's most popular
singers, Alla Pugacheva, has called on the Russian authorities to declare her a
"foreign agent", in solidarity with her strongly anti-war husband
Maxim Galkin. A showbiz star too, he was labelled a "foreign agent"
on Friday after condemning Russia's attack on Ukraine. On social media
Pugacheva called her husband "a true incorruptible Russian patriot, who
wants... an end to our lads dying for illusory aims". She has been a big
star for decades. She said the Kremlin's "illusory aims" in Ukraine
"make our country a pariah and the lives of our citizens extremely
difficult". Galkin, a comedian, TV presenter and singer, wanted
"prosperity for his motherland, peace, free speech", she added. The
label "foreign agent" has been applied by the Russian government to
various media organisations, campaign groups and individuals openly critical of
Kremlin policies.
Analysis box by Steve
Rosenberg, Russia editor Alla Pugacheva has been a musical megastar here
for decades. First, in the Soviet Union, where she began her career in the
1960s; then, after the fall of the USSR, in Russia. She is a hugely
popular and well-respected artist, which makes her public comments about
Russia's offensive in Ukraine big news. Her assertion that "our
lads are dying for illusory aims that make our country a pariah and the lives
of our citizens extremely difficult" is likely to infuriate the Kremlin.
It remains to be seen whether it will have any effect on Russian public
opinion over what the Kremlin still calls its "special military
operation". Pugacheva and Galkin went to Israel in late March, a
month after the Russian invasion, and Pugacheva returned to Russia late last
month with her children.
In early September President
Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said of Galkin: "Our paths have
clearly diverged - he has made very bad statements." Galkin condemned Russian
troops' alleged atrocities and said there could be no justification for the
Ukraine invasion. Artemy Troitsky, a leading figure in Russian music who left
the country in 2014 because of his opposition to Vladimir Putin and now lives
in Estonia, told the BBC Pugacheva's intervention was significant. "Alla
Pugacheva is the biggest pop star in Russia in the past almost 50 years,"
he said. "Her fame is monumental and she's a legendary figure. I think
this is something that many people have expected her to do some time ago
because her husband, Maxim Galkin, he's made his anti-war statements already
many times and several months ago. "I think this is her first ever strong
political statement and this in itself, of course, is quite shocking for the
people in Russia. I think she's not the only one who may turn the public
opinion. The obvious wrongdoings of the Russian army and the offensive of the
Ukrainian army and the worsening economic situation and so on, all those
factors they work against Putin and against the war. "But I think that
morally and emotionally this statement of Alla Pugacheva is maybe one of the
most strong efforts in these directions." Russia says it is fighting
neo-Nazis in Ukraine - a claim widely dismissed - and that it is threatened by
the Nato alliance's strong relations with Ukraine.
Since the invasion on 24
February, the UN has recorded at least 5,718 civilian deaths, with 8,199
injured, and more than seven million Ukrainians have been recorded as refugees
across Europe. The actual civilian death toll is believed to be thousands
higher. Tens of thousands of combatants have been killed or injured. Russia, a
global energy supplier, is locked in an economic struggle with the West which
imposed sweeping sanctions in response to the invasion.
^ The more Russian Celebrities
and Others speak out against Putin and his War the better it will be for
everyone and hopefully, the sooner, Russia will be defeated and their War Crimes
will end. ^
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