Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song

Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song
A Russian law enforcement officer removes handcuffs from Diana Loginova, a street musician performing under the name Naoko, who was detained after publicly singing a song banned by the government as “extremist” in front of a crowd of fans, before a court hearing in Saint Petersburg, Oct. 16, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 16 October 2025
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Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song

Russian street musician is jailed for 13 days after she played banned song
  • Diana Loginova was arrested on Wednesday after her performance of the popular song “Swan Lake Cooperative”
  • A video showed a crowd of youngsters singing along with Loginova in a rare show of public defiance of the authorities

ST PETERSBURG: A teenage Russian street musician was jailed for 13 days on Thursday after she played a banned anti-Kremlin song on St. Petersburg’s central avenue.
Diana Loginova, an 18-year-old music student who performs under the name Naoko with her band Stoptime, was arrested on Wednesday after her performance of the popular song “Swan Lake Cooperative” by exiled Russian rapper Noize MC went viral on Russian social media.
A video showed a crowd of youngsters singing along with Loginova in a rare show of public defiance of the authorities, given the risk of arrest.
A St. Petersburg court found her guilty on Thursday of organizing an unplanned gathering that blocked public access to the metro — an administrative, as opposed to criminal, offense.
City police said after serving the 13 days, Loginova would be charged with an additional administrative offense of “discrediting” the Russian military.
If convicted, she could face a fine. Any subsequent re-offense could lead to criminal charges and a long prison term.
Noize MC, the musician who wrote “Swan Lake Cooperative” and whose real name is Ivan Alexeyev, is openly critical of the Kremlin and left Russia for Lithuania after the start of the war in Ukraine.
Moscow has added him to its list of “foreign agents,” which comprises hundreds of individuals and entities accused of conducting subversive activity with support from abroad.
Video posted online shows Loginova performing the song on St. Petersburg’s Nevsky Prospekt earlier this week as onlookers chant the lyrics: “I want to watch the ballet, let the swans dance. Let the old man shake in fear for his lake.”
The song does not name President Vladimir Putin or mention the Ukraine war. The ballet reference is to Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, which was played on television after the deaths of Soviet leaders and during a 1991 coup attempt against President Mikhail Gorbachev, to the point where it came to symbolize the end of a leader’s rule.
The lyrics also refer to Ozero (Russian for “lake“), a dacha cooperative north of St. Petersburg that is associated with Putin’s inner circle.
In May, a St. Petersburg court banned the song on the grounds it “may contain signs of justification and excuse for hostile, hateful attitudes toward people, as well as statements promoting violent changes to the foundations of the constitutional order.”
While links to “Swan Lake Cooperative” on YouTube and Noize MC’s website are blocked inside Russia, many young people use virtual private networks (VPNs) to circumvent such bans.
Loginova, who studies at a music college in St. Petersburg, has won multiple student music prizes in Russia and abroad.


Five Indian nationals kidnapped in Mali

Five Indian nationals kidnapped in Mali
Updated 08 November 2025
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Five Indian nationals kidnapped in Mali

Five Indian nationals kidnapped in Mali
  • The workers were kidnapped Thursday by gunmen near Kobri, in western Mali
  • No group has claimed the kidnappings so far

DAKAR: Gunmen have kidnapped five Indian nationals in Mali, their company and a security source said Friday, as the west African country reels from mounting unrest and militant violence.
The workers were kidnapped Thursday by gunmen near Kobri, in western Mali, the security source told AFP on condition of anonymity, saying they were employed by a company that is working on electrification projects.
“We confirm the kidnapping of five Indian nationals,” a company representative told AFP.
“The other Indians working for the company have been evacuated to Bamako,” the capital, he added.
No group has claimed the kidnappings so far.
Mali, currently ruled by a military junta, has been struggling to contain surging unrest blamed on criminal groups and militants linked to Al-Qaeda and the Daesh group.
The security situation has exacerbated an economic crisis in the impoverished country, where the Al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM) has imposed a suffocating fuel blockade.
Kidnappings targeting foreigners are common in the country, which has been plagued by coups and conflicts since 2012.
JNIM militants kidnapped two Emirati nationals and an Iranian near Bamako in September.
The victims were released last week for a ransom of at least $50 million, according to sources close to the negotiations.