A prominent Russian street musician and antiwar singer, Diana Loginova (who performs as Naoko with the band Stoptime), has had her jail term extended by an additional 13 days by a St. Petersburg court. Loginova was originally arrested and sentenced for “discrediting the Russian military” by performing a song by exiled artist Monetochka, as well as for “organizing a mass event”. The latest extension, ordered on October 29, stems from a charge of “petty hooliganism” after the court ruled that one of the lyrics in her music contained an expletive.
The case against Loginova has drawn national attention and sparked an impassioned following among younger Russians who oppose the Kremlin’s increasing suppression of dissent and artistic freedom. Loginova and her bandmates were taken back into custody immediately after their initial detentions were scheduled to end, raising concerns that they are caught in a punitive legal practice known as a “jail carousel,” where authorities use a string of minor administrative charges to keep critics in custody while building more severe criminal cases against them.Loginova now faces the potential for a criminal charge of re-offending for “discrediting the military,” which carries a penalty of up to five years in prison. The crackdown on musicians and artists, whose anti-war songs and defiant public performances have gone viral on social media, illustrates the evolution of musical censorship in Russia, which has expanded from targeted bans to systemic control over any content deemed a threat to state policies or traditional values.



