arch48
EN_01507207_0130
![arch48](img/medium/arch37/dvd0092/02/EN_01507207_0130.jpg)
Journalists follow a live broadcast of a Russia's Supreme Court hearing to consider prosecutor's request to dissolve Memorial International, the country's most prominent rights group, for allegedly violating the controversial law on "foreign agents", in Moscow on December 28, 2021. - Russia's Supreme Court on December 28, 2021 will consider a request to shut down Memorial, the country's most prominent rights group and chronicler of Stalin-era purges and contemporary political persecutions. The organisation, founded in 1989 by Soviet dissidents including Nobel Peace Prize laureate Andrei Sakharov, believes it will become a victim of the repression it was founded to keep at bay by the end of the week. (Photo by Natalia KOLESNIKOVA / AFP)
2021-12-28
NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA/AFP/East News
AFP
NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA
AFP_9VB2NA
1,85MB
50cm x 33cm przy 300dpi
1989, 2021, 28, A, AGENTS, ALLEGEDLY, AND, ANDREI, AT, BAY, BECOME, BELIEVES, BROADCAST, BY, CHRONICLER, CONSIDER, CONTEMPORARY, CONTROVERSIAL, COUNTRY, COURT, DECEMBER, DISSIDENTS, DISSOLVE, DOWN, END, FOLLOW, FOR, FOREIGN, FOUNDED, GROUP, HEARING, HORIZONTAL, IN, INCLUDING, INTERNATIONAL, IT, JOURNALISTS, JUSTICE, KEEP, KOLESNIKOVA, LAUREATE, LAW, LIVE, MEMORIAL, MOSCOW, MOST, NATALIA, NOBEL, OF, ON, ORGANISATION, PEACE, PERSECUTIONS, POLITICAL, POLITICS, PRIZE, PROMINENT, PROSECUTOR, PURGES, REPRESSION, REQUEST, RIGHTS, RUSSIA, SAKHAROV, SHUT, SOVIET, STALIN-ERA, SUPREME, THE, TO, VICTIM, VIOLATING, WAS, WEEK, WILL,