As Putin imposes internet blackouts, Russians show signs of frustration


Kisiev, 31, said local activists had submitted applications to hold rallies in 17 regions across Russia. They were all denied, he said, including some that were initially given the go-ahead. Despite that, the OVD-Info protest monitoring group said Tuesday that at least 25 people were arrested across Russia for protesting digital restrictions Sunday, 18 of them in Moscow. The group also reported detentions ahead of Sunday of people who tried to apply to hold a protest.

Protests could show those who donโ€™t agree with the restrictions โ€œthat there are other like-minded individuals,โ€ Kisiev said.

NBC News reached out to more than a dozen Russians to ask what they think about the calls for protests. Most did not respond, while some declined to speak, without providing a reason.

Earlier this year, some Russians said they feared the Kremlin was preparing the public for a โ€œNorth Koreaโ€ model of the internet, heavily controlled and censored by the state. โ€œI donโ€™t think the Russian public will accept this,โ€ Kisiev said, given how central the internet has become to the lives of millions in the country.

Russian authorities have said that mobile internet outages are necessary to stop attacks by Ukrainian drones, and that Telegram is turning into a breeding ground for terrorism.

These justifications are โ€œabsurd,โ€ Kisiev said, adding that the real motivation seems obvious. โ€œThe government is intentionally killing the internet so that users donโ€™t use foreign resources and get alternative information,โ€ he said.

โ€˜Bring back the internetโ€™

Russian authorities have touted the merits of a life without the internet, arguing itโ€™s an opportunity for a โ€œdigital detoxโ€ and more face-to-face interaction.

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A popular game show that aired on a Russian state TV channel as calls for protests grew earlier this month featured a childrenโ€™s choir, with members dancing enthusiastically and singing about how they donโ€™t need the internet. โ€œThe monitorโ€™s blue screen wonโ€™t ruin my dinner,โ€ they crooned.

But despite this effort from the Kremlin, there is a huge appetite from the public for a way to vent frustration about the mounting restrictions, said politician Boris Nadezhdin, who tried to run for president against Putin in 2024 and whose campaign was overseen by Kisiev.

Nadezhdin said in a phone interview that he supported the protests and had personally applied with authorities in the capital and the wider Moscow region for gatherings of up to 10,000 people. All his requests were turned down citing Covid concerns, he said.

โ€œThe slogans are clear,โ€ he said. โ€œBring back the internet, bring back Telegram, we donโ€™t need your MAX,โ€ he said, referring to the so-called national messenger increasingly imposed on Russians by the Kremlin. Critics say the app could be used for mass surveillance.

Taxi driver Alexey Popov applied for a protest against internet censorship in his Siberian town of Yakutsk. It was originally sanctioned for Monday, but that permission was later withdrawn, Popov, 27, told NBC News. The refusal letter from the municipal authorities, viewed by NBC News, stated that Popov could not hold a rally on any date because of โ€œconsiderable attentionโ€ to the event from โ€œdestructive individuals.โ€

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