During her activity as a journalist at
Novoe Vremya, Morari, having Moldovan citizenship, was expelled from Russia due to her journalistic investigations, which troubled the Kremlin leadership. Morari wrote about
money laundering cases involving high-ranking officials in President
Vladimir Putin's entourage. On 10 December 2007 she published an article titled "The Kremlin's Black Money," detailing the illegal use of funds to keep all significant parties in Russia dependent on the authorities. On December 16, upon her return from a week-long trip to Israel, she was denied entry into Russia at
Domodedovo Airport based on an
FSB decision. This incident prompted a protest from the Russian Journalists' Union. Consequently, Morari had to fly to
Chișinău. She had applied for Russian citizenship immediately after graduating from Moscow State University and was supposed to receive it in April 2008. On 17 January 2008, at the Russian Embassy in the Republic of Moldova, Morari was informed that she was banned from entering Russia for "state security reasons" in accordance with point 1, article 27 of the federal law "on entry and exit from the Russian Federation.” In March 2008, Morari filed a complaint with the
Moldovan police, claiming she had received death threats by phone. On 21 August 2008 she was denied Russian citizenship on the grounds of "calls for the overthrow of the constitutional order of the Russian Federation by force and threat to national security.” In August 2008, the radio station
Echo of Moscow reported that Morari had sued the Russian state at the
European Court of Human Rights for banning her entry. The entry ban was lifted in March 2012, only after
Yevgenia Albats, along with other chief editors
Dmitry Muratov (Novaya Gazeta) and
Alexei Venediktov (Echo of Moscow), personally requested President
Dmitry Medvedev to intervene. == Civic and political activism ==