On 1 March 2022,
Roskomnadzor, the Russian agency for monitoring and censoring mass media, wrote to the
Wikimedia Foundation asking for the removal of the article "" ('
Russian invasion of Ukraine') on the United States-hosted
Russian Wikipedia. The agency threatened to block access to the site, claiming that the article contained "illegally distributed information" including "reports about numerous casualties among service personnel of the Russian Federation and also the civilian population of Ukraine, including children". On 11 March 2022, a Russian Wikipedia editor based in
Minsk, Belarus,
Mark Bernstein, was detained by the Belarusian security service
GUBOPiK after he was accused online of violating the
2022 Russian fake news law for his edits on articles covering the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. On 16 March 2022, the
Russian Agency of Legal and Judicial Information (a
news agency founded by the
RIA Novosti, the
Constitutional Court of Russia, the
Supreme Court of Russia, and the
High Court of Arbitration of Russia in 2009) published an interview of Alexander Malkevich, the deputy chairman of the commission on the development of information society, media and mass communications of the
Civic Chamber of the Russian Federation. In this interview, Malkevich said that Wikipedia (both Russian and others) was becoming a "bridgehead for
informational war against Russia". He also stated that Russian law-enforcement agencies had identified thirteen persons who were carrying out "politically engaged editing" Wikipedia's articles, and about 30,000 bloggers "participating in informational war against Russia". According to
Novaya Gazeta, pro-Kremlin structures related to
Yevgeny Prigozhin are actively involved in
doxing "coordinators of an informational attack on Russia", including Wikipedia editors.
Novaya Gazeta also reports that
Special Communications Service of Russia (a division of the
Federal Protective Service) employees are trying to disseminate pro-Kremlin propaganda by editing Wikipedia articles. On 18 May 2022, Roskomnadzor demanded to remove articles about the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and the term "
Rashism" from the English Wikipedia. On 31 March 2022, Russian media censorship agency Roskomnadzor threatened to fine Wikimedia up to 4 million rubles (about ) if it did not delete information about the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine that is "misinforming" Russians. In April–May 2022, the Russian authorities put several Wikipedia articles on their list of forbidden sites. The list included the articles on the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and Rashism, several articles on Russian Wikipedia devoted to military action and war crimes during the
Russo-Ukrainian War, and two sections of the Russian article about
Vladimir Putin. On July 20, due to the refusal of Wikipedia to remove the articles about the Russo-Ukrainian war, Roskomnadzor ordered search engines to mark Wikipedia as a violator of Russian laws. ==See also==