Lucian Kim
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Protest

In Moscow’s Local Elections, Opponents Of Putin Find A Glimmer Of Hope

Published October 10, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

“There’s a huge demand among young people to go into politics, and there’s an understanding of how to do it.”

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Far From Moscow, Thousands Turn Out To Protest Putin In Siberia’s Capital

Published June 12, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

“I believed that Putin would make things better,” Galina Vorivoda, 62, said. “But it didn’t work out. He made things better only for a few people.”

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Banned From Russian TV, A Putin Critic Gets His Message Out On YouTube

Published June 1, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

Navalny at 20:18 is part-Jon Stewart in its righteous skewering of the powers that be, but also part-Vladimir Putin in its know-it-all approach to that which ails Russia.

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Muscovites Protest Mayor’s Plans to Demolish Their Homes

Published May 15, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

“They’ll make our life hell, and sooner or later they’ll squeeze us out,” Anna Sazonkina said. “But my civic conscience won’t allow me to vote for it.”

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What Russia’s Protests Mean For Putin’s Opposition

Published March 28, 2017 in NPR Leave a comment

If Alexei Navalny was one of many opposition figures during the winter of 2011-2012, Sunday’s protests have established him as today’s undisputed leader.

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Potemkin Village

Published August 11, 2016 in Berlin Policy Journal Leave a comment

As a friend and I sat on one of Moscow’s ubiquitous summer verandas one evening, quaint trams trundled by. For a moment, it almost felt like Prague.

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In Putin’s Russia, No Difference Between Doping and Duping

Published July 14, 2016 in Reuters Leave a comment

Russia’s doping scandal is only the symptom of a much larger problem.

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Germany Can Take That Smug Look Off Its Face

Published April 1, 2016 in Reuters Leave a comment

Germans are discovering that their society is not as equitable as they once believed, nor immune to the blather of populists.

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The Greek Bruce Willis Fights for Democracy — and Marxism?

Published February 15, 2016 in Reuters Leave a comment

If Yanis Varoufakis, the former Greek finance minister, was going to make a comeback, it had to be in the German capital.

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Why This Ukrainian ‘Revolution’ May Be Doomed, Too

Published May 17, 2015 in Reuters Leave a comment

Most Ukrainians wanted their country to be different by now. Even those who didn’t support the Maidan were fed up with living in Europe’s most corrupt country.

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Women Lead The Way Against Belarus’ Patriarch, Says Svetlana Tikhanovskaya

“Our women understood they don’t have to stay in their kitchens and can go and fight for their rights beside  — and even in front of their men,” said Svetlana Tikhanovskaya.

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About Lucian

Based in Berlin and Moscow, I’ve reported from the former Soviet empire since 1996. I started working as National Public Radio’s Moscow correspondent in December 2016. Before that I contributed to Reuters, Slate, Bloomberg and The Moscow Times, among others.

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