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About the Service

Despite censorship, Radio Azatliq is an entirely digital alternative to Russian state-controlled media, reporting in local languages and reaching audiences in the Volga-Ural region despite censorship since 1953.  

Idel.Realii covers public corruption, religious extremism, and environmental issues. 

Multimedia project “Eide!Online” teaches modern Tatar language online in response to increased Kremlin pressure to limit use of Tatar.  

Produced a special visual project on Russian war casualties. Published a book “Saying No to War,” featuring 40 Russians telling stories of resistance amid harsh sentences. 

Published investigative reports on “ethnic battalions” that the Russian regime formed to fight in Ukraine. 

Monitors and maps rising Chinese influence with a microsite.   

Four million people viewed the Service’s project about domestic violence and its effects. 

Reaching Audiences

Media Climate

Reporters Without Borders’ World Press Freedom Index ranks Russia 162nd out of 180 countries. 

Radio Azatliq journalist Alsu Kurmasheva has been detained in Kazan, Russia, since October 18, 2023, while visiting her elderly, ailing mother. 

Journalists frequently are subjected to harassment and threats; many freelancers are forced to leave the country for their safety.  

Multiple contributors have been labeled as foreign agents. Police in Kazan, Russia searched homes of several freelancers and briefly detained them in August 2022. 

Websites and social media accounts have been blocked or restricted.  

Media Center

Latest Updates

Central Asia in Focus: Russia Continues Sending Central Asians to Ukraine

In this week’s edition: Russia continues to send Central Asians to fight in its full-scale war on Ukraine, the Kazakh government faces criticism over its new media law, and more.

An image of the logo for the Majlis Podcast, which focus on Central Asian issues

The Threat Posed by IS-K To Central Asia — And Beyond

The threat of terrorism is never far from the minds of officials in Central Asia, who know that their region shares a 2,000-kilometer border with Afghanistan.

RFE/RL journalist Alsu Kurmasheva holds children’s drawings sent by her supporters as she attends a court hearing in Kazan, Russia, on May 31, 2024. “Considering that this is probably the only grass and trees I will see this summer, this is priceless," she said. (REUTERS/Alexey Nasyrov)

Journalists in Trouble: Russian Court Extends Alsu Kurmasheva’s Detention for Sixth Time

Russian court extends Alsu Kurmasheva’s detention; Georgia’s “foreign agent” bill becomes law; ECHR rules in favor of RFE/RL; and more.

Service Director

Rim Gilfanov

Rim Gilfanov is the Service Director of RFE/RL’s Tatar-Bashkir Service, known locally as Radio Azatliq. He began reporting for the Service in 1990 as a stringer and later as a broadcaster covering ethnic and religious minority issues. Gilfanov previously wrote for the Kazan newspaper Donya, and has published several books, including “Tatar Diaspora” (Kazan, 1993) and “Tatar Way in Reforming Islam” (Prague, April 2003). He is frequently interviewed by local Tatar media outlets. Gilfanov graduated from Kazan State University in 1991 with a degree in sociology and political science. 

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