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https://scmp.com/news/world/russia-central-asia/article/2133091/russia-may-block-youtube-and-instagram-after-graft
World/ Russia & Central Asia

Russia may block YouTube and Instagram after ‘graft’ video with model, deputy PM and billionaire goes viral

YouTube and Instagram may be blocked as early as Wednesday unless they agree to remove a video accusing the deputy prime minister of corruption

YouTube and Instagram may be blocked as early as Wednesday unless they agree to remove a video accusing the deputy prime minister of corruption

Russia may block access to YouTube and Instagram after billionaire Oleg Deripaska won a court injunction against videos and photographs that showed him and Deputy Prime Minister Sergey Prikhodko relaxing on a yacht with a woman described as an escort.

Deripaska won an order from Ust-Labinsk court in his native Krasnodar region ordering the removal of 14 Instagram posts and seven YouTube videos that breached his right to privacy, according to a spokeswoman for his company, Basic Element. 

Anti-Kremlin campaigner Alexey Navalny said the order also threatens to block his website after he published an online film alleging that the videos and photographs posted by the woman, who calls herself Nastya Rybka, showed evidence of a corrupt relationship between the aluminium tycoon and the senior minister.

Russian communications watchdog Roskomnadzor included the materials on its register of blacklisted sites following the court order.

Its press office declined immediate comment. Internet providers must block access to online services within days unless information declared illegal is deleted.

Nastya Rybka, asks her followers in a video to decide whether she should delete the images of Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Prikhodko and billionaire Oleg Deripaska from her Instagram account. Image: Nastya Rybka/Instagram
Nastya Rybka, asks her followers in a video to decide whether she should delete the images of Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Prikhodko and billionaire Oleg Deripaska from her Instagram account. Image: Nastya Rybka/Instagram

Deripaska denied wrongdoing after Navalny published his video February 8, calling it a “planned campaign” to damage his reputation. 

The injunction was granted February 9. Navalny’s allegations “should have been answered in a manly way, but we’ll stay within the law,” Prikhodko said, the RBC newspaper reported on February 9.

Navalny, who was barred from running against Vladimir Putin in March’s presidential elections, has built a massive online following in Russia for investigations accusing government ministers and top officials of corruption.

He inspired the largest anti-government protests since 2012 last year after releasing a video showing lavish estates allegedly belonging to Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, who denied the accusations.

YouTube and Instagram may be blocked in Russia as early as Wednesday unless they comply with the order and remove the material, Vedomosti newspaper reported, citing the watchdog. 

Alexei Navalny (seen in January) spread the photos and videos on his YouTube account - leading to a lawsuit and demands for them to be removed. File photo: AP
Alexei Navalny (seen in January) spread the photos and videos on his YouTube account - leading to a lawsuit and demands for them to be removed. File photo: AP

Representatives of Facebook Inc, which owns Instagram, and YouTube’s parent company, Alphabet Inc, declined to comment.

Deripaska is seeking removal of only the 14 Instagram posts and seven YouTube videos, and not to block access to the two services entirely, the spokeswoman for Basic Element said in an email.

But in reality that means the sites themselves will be blocked if the offending items are not removed, experts said.

“It’s impossible for internet providers to block certain pages on Instagram and YouTube,” and they’ll have to block the services unless the material singled out by the watchdog is deleted, said Karen Kazaryan, chief analyst at the Russian Association for Electronic Communications, an internet lobby group. 

There’s also a “high chance that Navalny may need to remove this information to avoid being blocked.”

– Чтобы летать с быстротой мысли или, говоря иначе, летать куда хочешь, – начал он, – нужно прежде всего понять, что ты уже прилетел… (с) отрывок из одной из моих любимых книг #Настярыбка#рыбка#секстренер#Охотница#Соблазнительница#Алекслесли#Явтемелесли#Секснанабережной#Онажегимнастка#Шлюха#Секси#Девушка#Модель#Топ#Истагерл#Девушкимосквы#Секс#Влюбление#Соблазнение#замужзаолигарха#ЛюбовницаДерипаски

A post shared by Настя Рыбка (@nastya_rybka.ru) on Oct 10, 2017 at 11:08pm PDT

The action against his investigation is “a brazen act of censorship,” Navalny wrote on his website, which remained accessible on Monday. 

“I urge everyone to spread this video wherever you can.”

Billionaire Alisher Usmanov took to YouTube last year to post his own video responses to Navalny’s allegations that he donated real estate to a fund benefiting Medvedev, calling the anti-corruption campaigner a “loser” and saying “I spit on you.” 

Usmanov later won a defamation lawsuit, in which a court ordered Navalny to retract the allegations.