Reserved for subscribers
REPORT. Like journalist Ekaterina Kotrikadze, tens of thousands of emigrants and dissidents from Russia and Belarus have fled to Georgia.
From our special correspondent in Tbilisi, Jeremy Andre
Published on
Link copied
Copy link
Dn the great Russian novels, there is sometimes a chapter where the heroine must leave Moscow in disaster and end up in the winding streets with the decaying facades of old Tbilisi – this is the case, for example, in A Moscow saga by Vasily Axionov. “What is happening to us is more like the white guard of Bulgakov”, suggests, for her part, Ekaterina Kotrikadze. More than 100 years after the October Revolution, he seems to be reliving the exile of the “White Russians” and the time of the collapse of tsarism. Like tens of thousands of others, this star presenter has fled her country and has just landed in the Georgian capital after an incredible exodus. His channel, Dojd TV, the last independent Russian television, was banned in early March for its coverage of the invasion…
Comment
You can no longer react to articles following the submission of contributions that do not comply with the moderation charter of Le Point.
You can no longer react to articles following the submission of contributions that do not comply with the moderation charter of Le Point.