Nina Litvinova, a Moscow dissident and human rights activist has taken her own life at the age of 80.

Nina Litvinova. Photo: Alexandra Astakhova / Mediazona
In a suicide note shared on Facebook by her cousin, the journalist Maria Slonim, Litvinova said she could no longer bear her powerlessness in the face of Russia’s war against Ukraine and the mass imprisonment of antiwar people at home. She was the granddaughter of Maxim Litvinov, Stalin’s foreign minister in the 1930s, and the sister of Pavel Litvinov, one of eight Soviet citizens who staged a now-legendary protest on Red Square in 1968 against the invasion of Czechoslovakia.
Litvinova’s death on the afternoon of May 13 was reported by RIA Novosti. The state news agency mentioned that she had left a note but said nothing of its contents.
“No one, of course, is going to publish the note […]. The reasons for her departure are laid out far too starkly there, and we decided to show the real reasons: she was killed by Putin!” Slonim wrote on Facebook.
Litvinova worked at the Institute of Oceanology of the Russian Academy of Sciences and, from the 1960s onwards, helped Soviet political prisoners. In recent years she had attended court hearings in the cases of the historian Yury Dmitriev, the Memorial co-chair Oleg Orlov, and the theatre director Evgenia Berkovich.
“Nina Litvinova embodied a quiet but unbending courage and decency. She was always there where the pain was greatest,” reads an obituary posted on Memorial’s social media.
Source: zona.media
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