Life and death in Putin’s gulag

Navalny’s death has exposed the similarities between Russia’s current penal system and Stalin’s

By Arkady Ostrovsky

The wake-up call in cell number nine of the IK-6 prison colony in the Siberian town of Omsk comes at 5am in the form of the Russian national anthem blasting from a loudspeaker. Vladimir Kara-Murza, a journalist and politician, knew as soon as he heard the opening chord that he had only five minutes to get up before prison guards would take away his pillow and mattress. By 5.20am his metal bed frame, attached to the wall, would be locked up so that he could not use it for the rest of the day. Kara-Murza’s cell, painted in bright blue, was five metres long and two metres wide. In the middle, a table and a bench were screwed to the floor. The only objects he was allowed to keep were a mug, a tooth brush, a towel and a pair of slippers. The light was never turned off.

Explore more

From the February 24th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

1843 magazine | Inside the AI back-channel between China and the West

Computer scientists are reaching out across the geopolitical divide to try to stop an apocalypse

1843 magazine | A journey through the world’s newest narco-state

Drugs transformed Ecuador from a Latin American success story into a war zone


1843 magazine | The radioactive flood threatening Central Asia’s breadbasket

What it’s like to live with nuclear waste on your doorstep


1843 magazine | Why I gave up trying to delete myself from the internet

An enjoyable trip down memory lane soon became a boring full-time job

1843 magazine | Why aren’t Harris and Trump listening to Pennsylvania’s steelworkers?

The candidates oppose the takeover of US Steel. But employees want it to go ahead