The memorial plaque on Anna Politkovskaya's house has been destroyed for the eighth time in three weeks.
A wooden memorial plaque, which had been hanging on the railing of journalist Anna Politkovskaya's home for over a week, has been destroyed again by unknown assailants.
As reported by the "Caucasian Knot," on January 27, representatives of the Yabloko party restored the memorial plaque on the home of journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who was murdered in Moscow, for the eighth time. All previous temporary plaques installed after the destruction of Politkovskaya's plaque were torn down by unknown assailants within a day of installation, and one resident of Politkovskaya's home reported the intentional destruction of the temporary plaques.
On January 18, vandals smashed a memorial plaque bearing Anna Politkovskaya's name on Lesnaya Street in Moscow, near the building where Novaya Gazeta columnist Anna Politkovskaya lived and was murdered. Activists from the Civil Initiative group installed a temporary plaque to replace the one destroyed, but it was also destroyed on January 19. 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 has been fined 1,000 rubles, though he denied any wrongdoing, claiming the plaque "fell and broke on its own."
Kirill Goncharov, chairman of the Moscow branch of Yabloko, reported today that a memorial plaque on Anna Politkovskaya's house had been destroyed yet again. He claims the plaque was still intact the day before.
"Speechless. I came yesterday, and everything was in place," he wrote on his Telegram channel.
The plaque, installed by Yabloko activists at the entrance to a building on Lesnaya Street in Moscow, remained in place longer than all the other temporary plaques. After its installation, police posted guards near Politkovskaya's house and searched passersby there for some time, activists reported.
"A police car was on duty, parked next to the memorial plaque, which had been installed for the eighth time. Security forces checked the pockets and bags of random passersby. Law enforcement officers searched two men and then released them without arrest. Another police squad was stationed nearby, as well as plainclothes officers," SOTAvision reported on the evening of January 28. (listed as a foreign agent by the Russian Ministry of Justice).
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 had 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".
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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 her murder have already been released, but the mastermind behind the killing has never been convicted, Politkovskaya's colleagues recalled.
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"Caucasian Knot" is publishing 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.
Translated automatically via Google translate from https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/420572