On 26 April 2017, the Prosecutor General's Office of Russia recognized the following organisations as "undesirable":
Open Russia, the Open Russia Civic Movement (registered in the
UK), the Institute of Modern Russia (headed by
Mikhail Khodorkovsky's son Pavel in the
US). According to the authorities, all three organizations were involved in the implementation of "special programs and projects aimed at discrediting the results of the Russian elections, at seeing the results thereof recognised illegitimate" and "encouraging protest speeches and destabilizing the domestic political situation, which poses a threat to the foundations of the constitutional structure of the Russian Federation and the security of the state". In May of the same year, the Russian Ministry of Justice told reporters at a press briefing that the work of the Russian Open Russia Movement will not be conflated with the work of the British organisations that had been recognised as "undesirable". In January 2019, the authorities conducted searches against Open Russia activists in
Pskov,
Kazan, Rostov-on-Don, and
Ulyanovsk. On 21 January they searched Anastasia Shevchenko's house. She was detained shortly afterwards. Shevchenko was kept in a pre-trial detention facility for 48 hours until her court hearing. On 23 January she was placed under house arrest by the Leninsky District Court of Rostov-on-Don. On 29 January, the Rostov Regional Court upheld the lower court's decision to place her under house arrest. On 31 January, Shevchenko's eldest daughter, Alina, died in Zverev City Hospital. She was taken into the intensive care unit two days earlier and the investigator only allowed Shevchenko to visit her a few hours before she died. On 1 February,
Dmitry Peskov, press secretary to President
Vladimir Putin, expressed his condolences at the death of Shevchenko's daughter. On 24 January
Human Rights Watch condemned persecution of Shevchenko and violation of her right to freedom of expression and association. On 25 January
Memorial recognized Shevchenko as a prisoner of conscience. On the same day, the US Mission to the OSCE expressed concerns over her prosecution. On 8 February, the Memorial Human Rights Center, Russia's oldest human rights organization, recognized Anastasia Shevchenko as a victim of political persecution and a political prisoner. On 21 February, 12 human rights organisations signed a statement calling for the release of Anastasia Shevchenko as well as other political prisoners in Russia. Two US senators also published a statement condemning the Kremlin's persecution of Anastasia Shevchenko. On 15 March, the Leninsky District Court of Rostov-on-Don extended Shevchenko's house arrest until 17 June 2019. The court also rejected the appeals made by Shevchenko's defense to soften the terms of her house arrest. On 18 February 2021 Shevchenko was found guilty and received a suspended sentence of 4 years of imprisonment(later it was reduced to 3 years). ==Emigration==