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Meduza
Russian bilingual online newspaper headquartered in Riga
Russian bilingual online newspaper headquartered in Riga
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Meduza |
| Медуза | |
| logo | Meduza logo.svg |
| type | News website |
| owners | Galina Timchenko |
| founder | Galina Timchenko, Ivan Kolpakov, Ilya Krasilshchik |
| publisher | Galina Timchenko (since 2019) |
| general_manager | Galina Timchenko |
| chief_editor | Ivan Kolpakov |
| managing_editor | Kevin Rothrock |
| news_editor | Eilish Hart |
| founded | |
| language | Russian |
| English | |
| headquarters | Riga, Latvia |
| website | Russian: |
| English: |
the news website
Медуза English English:
Meduza (Russian: Медуза, named after the Greek mythological figure Medusa) is a Russian and English-language independent news website, headquartered in Riga, Latvia. It was founded in 2014 by a group of former employees of the then-independent Lenta.ru news website. Free mobile applications for iOS, Windows Phone, and Android became the basis of the media.
History
In 2014, Galina Timchenko was fired from her job as chief editor at Lenta.ru by oligarch Alexander Mamut, a supporter of Vladimir Putin, after she had interviewed Right Sector leader Dmytro Yarosh. She launched the new webpage Meduza on 25 October 2014. Several former journalists of Lenta.ru joined the new online site.
Timchenko told Forbes that the decision to base Meduza in Latvia was made since "right now, establishing an independent Russian language publishing house in Latvia is possible, while in Russia it is not". Moreover, Timchenko stated: "We understood that in Russia, most likely, they would not let us work."
Russian businessman and former oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky and telecommunications magnate Boris Zimin had been considered as passive investors, but they parted ways "for strategic and operational reasons". Timchenko said Khodorkovsky had wanted 100 percent control of Meduza, which she considered unacceptable. For financial reasons, Timchenko and her partner at Amond & Smith Ltd, Sergey Nazarkin, based Meduza in Latvia.
In February 2015, the website also launched an English-language version. In January 2016, Timchenko handed over the role of chief editor to her deputy Ivan Kolpakov.
In August 2017, Meduza started a partnership with the American news website BuzzFeed News. The partnership included publishing each other's materials, sharing experiences, and carrying out and publishing joint investigations.
On October 20, 2018, at the outlet's annual celebration, Meduza chief editor and co-founder Ivan Kolpakov reportedly groped an employee's wife, saying, "You're the only one at this party I can harass and get away with it." Kolpakov was temporarily suspended until Meduza publicly censured and reinstated him. The incident triggered a social media backlash. On November 9 Kolpakov announced his resignation saying that "it is the only way to stop the crisis engulfing the website and minimize the damage to its reputation". He was reinstated as chief editor on March 11, 2019.
In 2019, Meduza started the English podcast The Naked Pravda, which highlights how Meduza's top reporting intersects with the wider research and expertise that exists about Russia.
In May 2022, Helsingin Sanomat started publishing individual Meduza articles translated in Finnish.
In February 2023, Timchenko's iPhone was targeted with Pegasus spyware. The attack occurred a day before a conference of exiled independent Russian media that was held in Berlin and which Timchenko attended; her phone could have been used to eavesdrop on the journalists' conversations during the conference. This attack is the first confirmed instance of Pegasus being used against a Russian journalist. It is unclear which state carried out the attack. Several employees of other independent Russian outlets, Current Time TV and Novaya Gazeta, received notifications from Apple that "state-sponsored attackers" may have attacked their phones as well.
In 2025 (April 26 to July 6), in Berlin, hosted No (Nein), curated by Meduza, consisting of an art exhibition by 13 invited international artists (anonymous artist, Aleksey Dubinsky, Alexander Gronsky, Semyon Khanin, Gülsün Karamustafa, Stine Marie Jacobsen, Teobaldo Lagos Preller, Cristina Lucas, Pavel Otdelnov, Sergei Prokofiev, Fernando Sánchez Castillo, SUPERFLEX, Pilvi Takala, and Alisa Yoffe) and a specifically commissioned video documentary presentation chronicling the last ten years of Meduza. The documentary was directed by exiled Russian playwright Mikhail Durnenkov and featured interviews of Meduza contributors (Taisia Bekbulatova, Elena Kostyuchenko, Svetlana Reiter Lilia Yapparova, Zhenia Berezhna, Anton Dolin, Alexander Gronsky, Ivan Kolpakov, Galina Timchenko, and others) with support from Helsingin Sanomat Foundation, Fritt Ord Foundation, Stichting Editors Choice, JX Fund, Network of Exiled Media Outlets, and Committee to Protect Journalists.
Funding
Meduza sources its funding from crowdfunding and international organizations. In September 2025, Meduza released an appeal for donations, citing the criminalization of Meduza by the government of Russia (ending advertising and donations from Russian sources), and the demise of foreign assistance from USAID. About 15% of Meduza's annual budget came from programs funded by the US government, until foreign assistance was cut off in February 2025.
Structure
By 2014 Meduza had a team of around 20 journalists. No Latvian journalists contribute to the project.
Since March 2015, Meduza has published a daily news called "Evening Meduza".
In September 2022, it announced the creation of English email dispatch "The Beet", aiming to amplify "local perspectives" from Central/Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia, "without centering Moscow". Its debut article was titled 'Suing Gorbachev' and explored Soviet violence in the Baltic states under Mikhail Gorbachev.
Audience
Three months after opening, Meduza had 1.3 million monthly readers of its Internet publication. In 2017, Meduza had 7.5 million readers per month and 2 million followers on social media. In 2020, Meduza was the leading Russian site in social media links, according to , a company that monitors and analyzes exclusively Russian sites on media and social networks. By March 2022, Meduzas website had between 12 and 18 million monthly visitors. The majority of readers are younger than 45.
Meduza grants open source access to all their coverage of the war in Ukraine under a Creative Commons license. The articles can be reprinted in full (CC BY 4.0, does not apply to photos).
Censorship
Meduza aims to fill a market niche that exists due to "a long list of forbidden topics which Russian media do not raise for various reasons—due to direct and indirect censorship".
The day after it was launched (in October 2014), Meduza was blocked in Kazakhstan, probably due to an article about the city of Oskemen (Ust-Kamenogorsk).
By October 2016, access to the site has also been blocked in Uzbekistan.
By 15 April 2016, Meduza reported installing technical measures to circumvent censorship with their mobile apps.
In June 2019, Meduza journalist Ivan Golunov was arrested by Russian police for claimed drug offences. Colleagues and friends of Golunov said they believed the charges to be fabricated, motivated by his investigations into corruption. Following a public outcry, Golunov was released, and five police officers were fired and later arrested.
On 23 April 2021, the Russian Ministry of Justice designated Meduza as a foreign agent. In response, the European Union rejected the decision, saying this restriction "goes against Russia's international obligations and human rights commitments". Russia's actions caused financial difficulties for Meduza, as they stopped many advertisers from Russia, which were the portal's main source of income, from displaying their ads at Meduzas pages. This resulted in an international campaign to collect funds to ensure Meduzas survival through donations and buying subscriptions. Timchenko said the designation made it even harder to obtain sources that are willing to talk to the reporters – specifically without the protection of anonymity.
Meduza published an editorial condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022; due to its coverage of the invasion, the site was blocked on the territory of Russia by Roskomnadzor among other news websites due to the "systematic dissemination of fakes". Despite the actions of Roskomnadzor, Meduza managed to maintain most of its Russian readers, but the economic sanctions imposed on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine also hit Meduzas finances, as the sanctions made it nearly impossible to send donations from Russia and 30,000 members across the Russian border were suddenly unable to donate to the website. As a result, Meduza launched a campaign seeking donations from new supporters outside of Russia. On March 11, Reporters Without Borders announced a mirror site has been set up. Russian journalist Ilya Krasilshchik, the former publisher of Meduza, was charged under the "fake news" law for denouncing the war in Ukraine.
On 26 January 2023, the Russian prosecutor-general’s office designated Meduza as an undesirable organization in Russia. In March 2023, Timchenko said that while "Russian propaganda has enormous financial sources" and the government can spend billions to spread disinformation, Meduza has a "little crowdfunding campaign by people of good will around the world, and some support from international organizations".
Meduza has implemented a number of technical solutions to bypass Russian censorship, including reliance on mobile apps and the ability to save articles as PDF files.
Criticism
In December 2022, the independent outlet Proekt criticized Meduza for publishing, on numerous occasions, unverified claims coming from unnamed officials in the Putin's administration. The number of "exclusive articles" coming from such sources has significantly increased, especially since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Awards
- 2016 - Ilnur Sharafiev received the Redkollegia award for the article 18 thousand rubles per person published in Meduza.
- 2022 - Galina Timchenko received the Committee to Protect Journalists' (CPJ) Gwen Ifill Press Freedom Award as Meduzas CEO and publisher for "extraordinary and sustained achievement in the cause of press freedom".
- 2022 - The Fritt Ord Prize for courageous, independent and fact-based journalism. "Prix Spécial" du Prix Franco-Allemand du Journalisme/Deutsch-Französischer Journalistenpreis.
References
References
- "Meduza.io (Medusa Project)".
- [https://meduza.io/en/news/2019/03/11/ivan-kolpakov-has-been-named-meduza-s-chief-editor Ivan Kolpakov has been named Meduza’s chief editor] {{Webarchive. link. (1 July 2022 ''meduza.io'')
- ""Медуза" ответила на вопросы читателей".
- Urman, Aleksandra. (2019-10-13). "News Consumption of Russian Vkontakte Users: Polarization and News Avoidance". [[International Journal of Communication]].
- Lavrinenko, Olga. (2021). "When Students Protest. Universities in the global North". [[Rowman & Littlefield]].
- (2022-03-04). "Russia restricts access to DW's website". [[Deutsche Welle]].
- (2022-03-04). "Russia says 'limiting' sites of BBC, Deutsche Welle, Meduza".
- (2022-03-02). "European Media Offer Support to Ukrainian, Russian Colleagues".
- Vasilyeva, Nataliya. (2019-06-07). "Prominent investigative journalist detained in Russia".
- Beard, Nadia. (23 October 2014). "Russian journalists set up shop in Latvia after Kremlin crackdown". [[The Guardian]].
- Taratuta, Julia. (2014-10-10). "Галина Тимченко, главред Meduza: унизительно, когда вся политическая журналистика затаив дыхание следит за движением бровей президента". [[TV Rain]].
- "I was 'fired' because of the Kremlin". [[BBC News]].
- "Meduza is 10! Meet the people who bring you the latest on Russia, every single day. How did they end up at Meduza in English? And what makes their work so interesting?".
- (15 September 2014). "Галина Тимченко: "Никто из нас не мечтает делать «Колокол"".
- (2014-09-29). "Meduza Тимченко зазвонит из Латвии".
- Подрез, Тарас. (2014-08-27). "Экс-главред Lenta.ru Галина Тимченко учредила Medusa Project".
- [https://meduza.io/en/news/2016/01/28/meduza-chief-editor-steps-down-remains-as-ceo Meduza chief editor steps down, remains as CEO] {{Webarchive. link. (1 February 2016 , ''Meduza'', January 28, 2016.)
- Wang, Shan. (2017-08-29). "Stories about Russia "are so hot right now" — so BuzzFeed is partnering with Meduza for more substantive Russia reporting".
- (2017-12-07). "Galina Timchenko". [[Politico Europe]].
- Gershkovich, Evan. (9 November 2018). "Editor's Resignation Signals Milestone #MeToo Moment in Russia". The Moscow Times.
- Brown, Hayes. (9 November 2018). "This #MeToo Moment Is Tearing The Russian Internet Apart". BuzzFeed News.
- Stewart, Rick. (2018-11-09). "Russia's most progressive media outlet finds itself on the wrong side of #MeToo".
- (9 November 2018). "Meduza Editor In Chief Resigns Amid Sexual Harassment Accusations". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
- "'The Naked Pravda' premiere trailer: Meduza's new English-language podcast". mdza.io.
- Mukka, Antero. (3 May 2022). "Jokainen teko sananvapauden puolesta syö pohjaa sortovallalta". [[Helsingin Sanomat]].
- (13 September 2023). "Russian journalist's phone hacked with Israeli spyware, researchers say". Reuters.
- (14 September 2023). "A report of a Pegasus attack on one Russian journalist sets off a flurry of concern among others.". The New York Times.
- (2026). "Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien presents 'No'".
- "No. The Exhibition". Kulturprojekte Berlin GmbH.
- (15 September 2025). "Meduza: Berlin exhibition highlights the publication speaking truth to Putin while in exile".
- "No. The exhibition curated by Meduza".
- "About us".
- (April 28, 2025). "No". e-flux.
- "We need your help An urgent appeal from the Meduza team".
- (26 February 2025). "Federal Funding Crackdown Imperils Global Newsrooms".
- "The Beet: A new email dispatch from Meduza".
- "Suing Gorbachev 31 years after the USSR's collapse, a group of Lithuanians sought to hold its last leader to account".
- (28 January 2015). "Российская аудитория сайта Meduza.io достигла 1,3 млн человек в месяц".
- "Meduza: Doing New Media in a Perfect Storm".
- (2021-01-28). "Федеральные СМИ - 2020 год".
- "Meduza is granting open access to all coverage of the war in Ukraine under a Creative Commons license".
- Лихачёв, Никита. (21 October 2014). "Издание Meduza заблокировали в Казахстане после репортажа из Усть-Каменогорска". tjournal.ru.
- (29 October 2016). "Галина Тимченко, гендиректор и учредитель проекта Meduza (Рига)". [[Ukrinform]].
- (15 April 2016). "Кошки-мышки в Казахстане".
- (15 September 2023). "Meduza - Exiled Pirate Media Outlet Breaks Thru the Kremlin Propaganda Firewall". DEF CON 31.
- MacFarquhar, Neil. (June 7, 2019). "Russian Reporter Who Exposed Moscow Graft Is Arrested on Drug Charges". [[The New York Times]].
- Roth, Andrew. (June 7, 2019). "Russian police accused of arresting journalist on false charges". The Guardian.
- (29 January 2020). "Former officers who searched 'Meduza' journalist Ivan Golunov arrested, may face drug possession and evidence falsification charges".
- (2021-04-23). "Russia Labels Meduza Media Outlet As 'Foreign Agent'".
- (2021-04-23). "Минюст внес "Медузу" в список "иностранных агентов"". Meduza.
- Yun Chee, Foo. (2021-04-24). "EU rejects Russian decision to label media outlet Meduza as 'foreign agent'".
- (2021-04-21). "EU 'Rejects' Russian Labeling Of Meduza Media Outlet As 'Foreign Agent'".
- (2021-04-24). ""Обязанность властей — обеспечить журналистам возможность заниматься своей работой в атмосфере, свободной от страха и принуждения"".
- (2021-04-24). "Russia: Statement by the Spokesperson on labelling Meduza as "foreign agent"".
- "'Is this the end of Meduza?' Hobbled by sanctions, Russian journalists seek Western donors.". [[The Washington Post]].
- Baer, Stephanie K.. (14 March 2022). "This Russian Newsroom Has Been Cut Off From Its Readers Amid Putin's War. Now It's Asking The World To Help It Report The Truth.".
- Bieliaszyn, Wiktoria. (2022-03-14). "Pomóż Meduzie. Rosji potrzebna jest choć jedna niezależna redakcja".
- (24 February 2022). "No to War An editorial from Meduza".
- (2022-03-04). "Сайты "Голоса Америки", BBC, DW, Meduza и "Радио Свободы" заблокировали". [[РИА Новости]].
- Hakala, Pekka. (29 March 2022). "Uutissivusto Meduza onnistui säilyttämään venäläiset lukijansa Venäjän estämisistä huolimatta, mutta nyt rahat ovat loppumassa pakotteiden vuoksi". Helsingin Sanomat.
- Baer, Stephanie K.. (2022-03-14). "This Russian Newsroom Has Been Cut Off From Its Readers Amid Putin's War. Now It's Asking The World To Help It Report The Truth.".
- "Новости".
- (2022-03-11). "RSF creates "mirror" of leading Russian exile news site blocked by Kremlin".
- (11 May 2022). "Here's who Russia has punished for speaking out against the war in Ukraine". The Hill.
- Heintz, Jim. (2023-01-26). "Russia declares critical news outlet Meduza 'undesirable'".
- Duchiade, André. "Meduza's strategies to outwit Kremlin censorship shared with 25th ISOJ audience – International Symposium on Online Journalism".
- (2022-12-19). "Непубличный дом.".
- (2016-11-30). "18 тысяч рублей за человека".
- (2016-12-14). "Журналист Ильнур Шарафиев получил премию "Редколлегия" за статью в "Медузе"".
- (7 March 2023). "A Russian Editor Evades Putin's Censorship". The New York Times.
- "Galina Timchenko - Committee to Protect Journalists".
- "The Fritt Ord Prize 2022".
- (13 July 2022). "Remise du Prix Franco-Allemand du Journalisme, édition 2022 13/07/2022".
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