Bäckman has been a commentator of Finnish-Russian child custody and "grandmother cases" in Russian media. He has claimed that Finnish authorities persecute Russian mothers and take custody of their children without a reason. The Finnish Broadcasting Company
Yle, quoting
Timo Vihavainen, a professor of Russian history, speculated that this has happened due to fact that Bäckman's opinions match the interests of the Kremlin. Later, Bäckman apologized for his behaviour, and promised not to further intervene in the incident. However, he later deleted his apology, continuing to comment on the case. He was also an active commentator for Russian press during the
Rantala incident in 2010. Bäckman also received media time with grandmother and similar child custody cases in 2010. In September 2014, he alleged that the Finnish authorities had unjustifiably taken custody of a daughter of a Russian mother, and that the mother would seek help from the Russian Children's Ombudsman Pavel Astahov, who has a background in
KGB. Bäckman's first public appearance was in the late 1980s when he played
bassoon in the EBU Young Soloists Competition on national television. He also played bassoon in the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra. In March 2002, during a military historical festival in
Suojärvi in the
Republic of Karelia which was dedicated to the 62nd anniversary of the end of the
Winter War, Bäckman made a sensational claim that the modern authorities of Finland propagated the idea that the Russian people are genetically inferior and expected Russia to collapse in about twenty years. The other participants at the festival considered that he unreasonably overestimated the extent of
anti-Russian sentiment in Finland. According to Bäckman's article "Finland without a mask" (the title alludes to a 1943 proclamation by
Otto Wille Kuusinen), published in Russian in May 2002, the Finns in general consider themselves a superior nation, all Russian women prostitutes, and all Russian men thieves and bandits. During 2002, Bäckman gained an odious reputation both in Russia and among his Finnish colleagues. In 2002, Bäckman publicly accused the
Foreign Ministry of Finland of
Russophobia and racism. He claimed that the ministry was preparing a campaign to smear Russia and return the territories lost in the
Paris Peace Treaty. In 2003, Johan Beckman Institute published the book
Finland and the Siege of Leningrad 1941-1944 by the Russian historian
Nikolai Baryshnikov. The
Saint Petersburg legislature awarded Bäckman their
Marshal Govorov Literature Prize (2003) for the book. Historian
Timo Vihavainen, a historian at the University of Helsinki described it as "a book built on
Stalinist propaganda stereotypes". Vihavainen also said that Baryshnikov had misunderstood some of the language in Finnish archive documents. Bäckman and Baryshnikov threatened to sue Vihavainen.
Nashi protests in Helsinki In March 2009, as a member of the
Finnish Anti-Fascist Committee, Bäckman arranged a series of protests in Helsinki attended by activists of the Russian
Nashi, and
Night Watch organizations, against what they called the "opening [of] a new anti-Russian front of information warfare on the territory of Finland by [the] Estonian embassy." In addition,
Abdullah Tammi and his followers from the prospective
Finnish Islamic Party participated. The protests were aimed against seminars, against a book about the
Soviet occupation of Estonia, and against films presented by the Estonian embassy in Finland, especially the film
Soviet Story by
Edvins Snore. In media commentaries for Swedish, Finnish and Russian press, television and radio, Bäckman claimed that the Soviet Union did not occupy Estonia, and belittled the significance of the
Soviet deportations from Estonia.
Criminal conviction Bäckman has criticized
Yle journalist
Jessikka Aro, who investigated pro-Russian
Internet trolls, accusing her of "Russo-phobic" tendencies and claiming that she was "well-known assistant of American and Baltic special services." Presented statements led prosecutors to formally charge Bäckman for harassment and aggravated defamation of Aro. In October 2018, Bäckman received a 12-month suspended jail sentence for aggravated defamation and stalking. Bäckman said he would appeal the verdict. In February 2022, the Supreme Court of Finland upheld the verdict that Bäckman was guilty of stalking of Jessikka Aro, while the defamation charge was dropped. Bäckman was given a 60-day suspended prison sentence, and he was ordered to pay Aro a compensation of 9,000 euros and an additional 9,200 euros for her loss of earnings. == Ukraine ==