Activists have restored the plaque on Politkovskaya's house for the 29th time.
The 28th temporary plaque installed on the building where Anna Politkovskaya lived and was murdered was destroyed by unknown assailants. Activists placed the 29th temporary plaque at her entrance.
As reported by the "Caucasian Knot," on January 18, the memorial plaque, which had hung for almost 20 years on the wall of the building on Lesnaya Street in Moscow where Novaya Gazeta columnist Anna Politkovskaya lived and was shot, was smashed for the first time. Most of the temporary plaques installed by activists after that lasted less than 24 hours. On March 16, in addition to the memorial plaque, 27 temporary plaques were installed.
Most of the plaques repeat the original text from the broken plaque: "Anna Politkovskaya lived in this house and was vilely murdered on October 7, 2006." Some plaques alleged neo-Nazi involvement in the destruction of the memorial plaques. Representatives of a far-right organization designated as terrorist claimed responsibility for the destruction of the first plaque. The man who smashed a memorial plaque was fined 1,000 rubles, though he denied any wrongdoing, claiming that the plaque "fell and broke on its own."
This morning, the Sotavision* project reported that the 27th temporary plaque had been destroyed on Anna Politkovskaya's house, reporting on the plaque's restoration for the 28th time.
Activists plan to continue restoring the memorial plaque until it permanently remains on the house where Anna Politkovskaya died, the publication states.
However, today, unknown individuals tore down the 28th plaque, RusNews reports.
It was also restored today, with a temporary plaque attached to the fence near The entrance to the building. The plaque repeats the text of the original memorial plaque: "Anna Politkovskaya lived in this building and was vilely murdered on October 7, 2006," the publication states.
Any civic statement, whether a plaque in memory of Anna Politkovskaya or a "Last Address" sign for a victim of Stalin's repressions, provokes active aggression among supporters of the government in Russia. Impunity encourages spontaneous acts of vandalism, committed even without direct orders from above, human rights activists interviewed by the "Caucasian Knot" indicated.
In January, one of the building's residents admitted to destroying a temporary plaque. "Yes, I'm breaking it! And who gave you permission to hang it? She didn't live here, she had a safe house! This is my home! I didn't give you permission!" she said. She added that she wasn't the one who broke the original memorial plaque, but that the plaque "was always in her way." Galina Shustova, a 69-year-old Kadyrov fan, regularly tears down temporary plaques and bouquets of flowers and takes them to the nearest trash bin, Victoria Artemyeva noted in an article for Novaya Gazeta on February 17.
Anna Politkovskaya, known for her articles on the war and human rights violations in Chechnya, was killed in Moscow on October 7, 2006. The court found that Lom-Ali Gaitukayev organized the murder, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment. Rustam Makhmudov has been identified as the direct perpetrator, according to the "Caucasian Knot" report "The Murder of Anna Politkovskaya".
Anna Politkovskaya's last interview was given to a "Caucasian Knot" correspondent an hour and a half before her death. In this interview, the journalist commented on Ramzan Kadyrov's career prospects.
In 2025, on the 19th anniversary of Anna Politkovskaya's murder, residents of Moscow and St. Petersburg brought flowers to her grave, the Novaya Gazeta office, and the memorial to the victims of repression. Some of those convicted in the case of her murder have already been released, but the person who ordered it has not yet been convicted, Politkovskaya's colleagues recalled.
On the fifth anniversary of Politkovskaya's murder, journalists and human rights activists at a rally in Tbilisi emphasized her contribution to the fight for freedom of speech, demanding that those who ordered her murder be identified.
"Caucasian Knot" publishes materials dedicated to Politkovskaya on the thematic page "Politkovskaya and Estemirova", which also contains materials about Anna's friend, journalist and human rights activist Natalia Estemirova, who was killed in 2009 and also worked on the problems of residents of Chechnya.
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