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Why is Russia afraid of crime fiction novelist Boris Akunin?
Why is Russia afraid of crime fiction novelist Boris Akunin?

Indian Express

time7 days ago

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

Why is Russia afraid of crime fiction novelist Boris Akunin?

The story goes that Erast Fandorin, the fictional sleuth at the heart of Russian writer Grigory Chkhartishvili's fame, was both an act of defiance and an impulse of love. In the Russia of the 1990s, still wrestling with its post-Soviet identity, crime fiction was considered lowbrow, a guilty pleasure best concealed beneath brown-paper covers. Chkhartishvili 's wife, a devoted reader of detective novels, felt self-conscious reading them in public. But the world was shifting. The Soviet Union had broken up in 1991 at the end of a long-drawn Cold War, and Chkhartishvili set out to write the kind of book that wouldn't need to be hidden in public. In 1998, under the pseudonym Boris Akunin, which loosely translates to 'great villain' in Japanese, he published The Winter Queen, featuring the dapper Fandorin. Part homage to golden-age mystery fiction, part historical tableau, it soon became a cult classic in Russia. Over a dozen Fandorin novels followed, making Akunin one of Russia's most widely read and celebrated contemporary authors. Another act of defiance and love, and of anxiety — about the authoritarian shift in his country — would shape the second chapter of his life, transforming him into a public intellectual who spoke up over and over again on Russia's military excesses and the failures of President Vladimir Putin's leadership. This week, as a Russian military court sentenced the writer to 14 years in prison in absentia for his opposition to the Russia-Ukraine war and his purported support for Ukraine, it marked yet another grim milestone in the Kremlin's escalating war on dissent. From scholar to dissident Born in Soviet Georgia in 1956, Akunin moved to Moscow soon after. He first came to attention as a literary translator, particularly of the works of Japanese greats such as Yukio Mishima. But it would be through his Fandorin novels that he would find his fullest voice. Set in imperial Russia at the turn of the 20th century, the series distilled the virtues of independent inquiry, scepticism of authority, and moral integrity. In chasing conspiracies and assassins, Fandorin seemed ever alert to the danger of centralised power — a subtle foreshadowing of Akunin's stance towards the rise and rise of Putin. Over time, Akunin became a literary shapeshifter, writing essays, speculative fiction, and novels under various names — Anatoly Brusnikin, Anna Borisova, and Akunin-Chkhartishvili, among others. Each voice, each form, added to his stature not just as a writer, but as a chronicler of Russian history. His journey into dissent began with Russia's attack on Georgia in 2008 and its annexation of Crimea in 2014. He was among the first of Russia's cultural elites to condemn these acts. In between these two events, Akunin moved to Europe, living between France and Spain, when he was not in Moscow. A writer's resolve Around the same time that the fictional Fandorin was making his way in the world, another Russian leader was charting his ascent. After years with the KGB, Putin had begun his political career in 1991. When president Boris Yeltsin resigned in December 1999, he would move to centre stage. In 2000, Putin became president, followed by a second term in 2004. Due to Russia's constitutional limitations, he would serve as prime minister under Dmitry Medvedev afterwards, running for a third term in 2011. In December 2011, when mass protests erupted in Russia after an election marred by allegations of fraud and intimidation, Akunin returned to Moscow and joined the people's movement. As he helped organise rallies and challenged rising nationalist figures, the novelist became a rallying force, lending the anti-Kremlin street protests both moral clarity and intellectual heft. In an act of symbolic defiance in 2012, he proposed a citizens' walk through Moscow, visiting statues of poets. Over 10,000 people joined him spontaneously. Within weeks, the Kremlin passed laws imposing staggering fines on unsanctioned gatherings. But by then, something irreversible had taken root. Akunin had stepped out of fiction and into history — not as a politician, but as a witness determined to measure what remained of Russia's civic soul. He refused to enter politics full time, asserting that his role as a writer gave him greater access to the Russian diaspora across the world. In a 2012 interview to The New York Times, Akunin said, 'Some of us are like a volunteer fire brigade, but that doesn't mean we want to become professional firefighters.' Kremlin crackdown In Akunin, the Kremlin encountered a rare figure who combines enormous cultural popularity with unflinching political critique. His public denunciations of Putin, amplified through essays and social media, have made him a symbol of resistance. Since 2014, Akunin has been on a self-imposed exile in the UK. In 2022, when the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, Akunin condemned it on social media, calling Putin 'a psychologically deranged dictator'. The state's retribution was swift. Last year, Akunin was added to Russia's register of 'terrorists and extremists', after he was designated a 'foreign agent' in 2023. He was accused of disseminating 'false information aimed at creating a negative image' of Russia and helping raise funds to support the Ukrainian military. Even though sentences in absentia come into effect if the defendant is extradited to Russia, the 'foreign agent' designation, much like the Soviet-era appellate 'enemies of the people', compels the accused to explicitly identify themselves in social-media posts and other public communications. It also imposes onerous financial reporting obligations. The publication and sale of Akunin's books have been restrained in Russia; plays based on his work pulled from theatres. Akunin had spoken of the implications of the censorship at the time: 'A seemingly minor event, the banning of books, the declaration of some writer as a terrorist, is actually an important milestone… Books have not been banned in Russia since Soviet times. Writers have not been accused of terrorism since the Great Terror. This is not a bad dream, this is happening to Russia in reality'.

Russian court sentences writer Boris Akunin in absentia to 14 years in prison — Novaya Gazeta Europe
Russian court sentences writer Boris Akunin in absentia to 14 years in prison — Novaya Gazeta Europe

Novaya Gazeta Europe

time14-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Novaya Gazeta Europe

Russian court sentences writer Boris Akunin in absentia to 14 years in prison — Novaya Gazeta Europe

A Moscow court sentenced exiled writer Boris Akunin in absentia to 14 years in prison on Monday, after he was found guilty of 'aiding and justifying terrorism' and violating the law on 'foreign agents', independent news outlet Mediazona has reported. Akunin, whose real name is Grigory Chkhartishvili, is a Russian-Georgian writer famous for his Erast Fandorin novels that have been published in dozens of languages around the world. The charge of aiding terrorism relates to a conversation between Akunin and well-known Russian pranksters Vovan and Lexus, in which the writer encouraged Russian servicemen to switch sides and fight for Ukraine, and called a Ukrainian attack on the Crimean Bridge a 'clear and direct way' to bring the realities of war home to 'stupid people'. The charge of justifying terrorism related to an online post where Akunin said he was for 'revolution, as there is no other way to get rid of a dictatorship', while the third and final charge concerned 'at least 33' Telegram posts to which he had failed to add a notification that the material was by a 'foreign agent', as required by Russian law. Prior to the sentence being handed down on Monday, Akunin wrote that he had taken no part in the trial. 'I don't recognise their court. I have not authorised any lawyer to represent me … and have not been part of this circus in any way.' After the announcement of his sentence, he joked with readers that he would next post in 2043, factoring in the four years subsequent to his release where he would be banned from administering internet websites. Rosfinmonitoring, the Russian financial watchdog, added Akunin, who now lives in London, having left Russia in protest at the annexation of Crimea, to its list of 'terrorists and extremists' in December 2023. The Russian Justice Ministry declared him a 'foreign agent' the following month.

Russia orders jailing of exiled writer Boris Akunin
Russia orders jailing of exiled writer Boris Akunin

France 24

time14-07-2025

  • Politics
  • France 24

Russia orders jailing of exiled writer Boris Akunin

The 69-year-old, best known for his historical detective novels, has been a longstanding critic of the Kremlin and its military offensive on Ukraine. He had already been added to Russia's terrorism blacklist and labelled a "foreign agent" by Moscow for opposing the conflict. Moscow's Second Western District Military Court on Monday found Akunin guilty of "justifying terrorism" over a February 2024 Telegram post in which he said he was "for revolution" in Russia, the Mediazona news outlet reported. He was also found guilty of "aiding terrorist activity" by making pro-Ukraine comments in a phone call with Russian pranksters posing as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, and of violating Russia's "foreign agent" laws. Akunin described the trial as a "farce". The Georgian-born writer, who has lived abroad since 2014, is one of Russia's most widely read contemporary authors. Moscow made disparagement of its military illegal weeks after launching its assault on Ukraine, and has detained thousands of the conflict's opponents since. Several prominent cultural figures have fled Russia since it launched its military operation in Ukraine, and those who have stayed face strict censorship. © 2025 AFP

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