âUnfortunately, I have been working at Channel One during recent years, working on Kremlin propaganda,â Ovsyannikova said. âAnd now I am very ashamed. I am ashamed that Iâve allowed the lies to be said on the TV screens. I am ashamed that I let the Russian people be zombified.â
She ended with a call to action, alluding to the high price of dissent in Russia: âIt is only in our power to stop this madness. Take to the streets, do not be afraid. They canât jail us all.â
The protest came as Russia deepens its repression of government critics, blocking sources of independent information on the fighting in Ukraine and criminalizing the publication of anything it deems âfake newsâ about the military. Thousands of people protesting the war have been arrested in Russia, according to OVD-Info, which says the invasion and its fallout have âirrevocably changed the life of Russian civil society.â
A recording of Monday eveningâs interrupted live broadcast was unavailable on Channel Oneâs website, which says it was taken down âat the request of the copyright holder.â All previous episodes from last week are readily available. Channel One said it is âlooking into the incident with an outsider appearing in the shot during a live broadcast,â according to state-run news agency TASS.
Citing an unnamed source in law enforcement, TASS also said the woman is detained and could be held liable under Russiaâs ban on âdiscreditingâ actions of its armed forces. The source said Ovsyannikova is an editor at Channel One, according to TASS. Ovsyannikovaâs Instagram account also identifies her as a Channel One employee.
The protester had jumped into frame as a longtime Channel One host, Ekaterina Andreeva, read an item about Russian efforts to mitigate the effect of sanctions over its actions in Ukraine.
Standing behind Andreeva, the protester held up a poster with a mix of English and Russian spelling a forbidden message: âNo war. Stop the war. Donât believe the propaganda, they are lying to you here.â The protester remained on the screen for several seconds before the program apparently cut away.
In her video message recorded earlier, Ovsyannikova said her father is Ukrainian and her mother is Russian. âThey have never been enemies,â she said, pointing to her necklace comprising the colors of the Russian and Ukrainian flags.
âWe were silent in 2014 when it all started,â she said, referring to the year when Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine. She said the silence continued when Kremlin critic and opposition activist Alexei Navalny was poisoned. âWe just silently watched this anti-human regime,â she said, âand now the entire world turned their backs against us.â
Russia has long drawn criticism for repressing dissent, and its invasion of Ukraine last month has ushered in a new era of global condemnation, with the West levying sanctions and major companies halting their Russian business.
Criticizing the war in Ukraine, Ovsyannikova said responsibility âfor this lies only on one person â [Russian President] Vladimir Putin.â
Thousands of people soon flooded Ovsyannikovaâs Facebook page with comments, many of them expressing thanks and calling her courageous. The Facebook page also identifies her as a Moscow resident with experience in âTV news broadcasts.â
âThank you for the truth!â one person wrote in Ukrainian.
âYou are a hero to me! Thank you!â said another.
In Russian, someone saluted her âcourage and honesty.â
âIf at least one in ten was even a little like you, Russia would be a prosperous democratic country,â the person wrote. âThanks for your action. Peace to us all!â
Paul Sonne contributed to this report.
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