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These prominent Russian officials quit their jobs and refused to support the war

Russian President Vladimir Putin and climate change envoy Anatoly Chubais
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, listens to Anatoly Chubais, then Moscow’s envoy on sustainable development, in November 2016.
(Associated Press)
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The recent resignation of a senior Russian government official and his reported move abroad wasn’t the first voluntary departure of a person from a state job since the start of Russia’s war on Ukraine, but it certainly was one of the most striking.

Anatoly Chubais, who was President Vladimir Putin’s envoy to international organizations on sustainable development, is well-known in Russia.

He held high-profile posts for nearly three decades, beginning under President Boris Yeltsin, Russia’s first post-Soviet leader.

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A number of public figures have condemned the invasion of Ukraine and left their posts at state-run institutions and companies, which could signal divisions in Russia’s official ranks over the war. So far there have been no indications that the resignations have reached into Putin’s inner circle.

The Times’ Marcus Yam, no stranger to war photography, gives a first-person account from Ukraine.

The departures come as Putin has denounced those opposing his course as “scum and traitors,” which Russian society would spit out “like a gnat.”

Some of the high-profile figures who have broken with the Kremlin because of the war:

Anatoly Chubais

On Wednesday, the Kremlin confirmed media reports of the resignation of Chubais, 66, who was the architect of Yeltsin’s privatization campaign. The reports, citing anonymous sources, said he stepped down because of the war. He hasn’t publicly commented on his resignation.

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Under Yeltsin, Chubais reportedly recommended the administration appoint Putin, a move that was widely seen as an important steppingstone in Putin’s career. Putin, as prime minister, became acting president of Russia on the last day of 1999 when Yeltsin stepped down, and was elected to the post in early 2000.

Chubais also was deputy prime minister from 1994 to 1996 and first deputy prime minister from 1997 to 1998.

The Russian business newspaper Kommersant reported Wednesday that Chubais was seen in Istanbul this week and ran a photo of a man resembling him at a Turkish ATM.

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Since the invasion, Istanbul has taken in many Russians looking to relocate.

Moscow’s war machine includes a popular TV talk show whose host, Dmitry Kiselyov, takes on anyone who contradicts Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Arkady Dvorkovich

Arkady Dvorkovich once served as Russia’s deputy prime minister and is currently chairman of the International Chess Federation, or FIDE.

He criticized the war on Ukraine in comments to Mother Jones magazine March 14 and came under fire from the Kremlin’s ruling party.

“Wars are the worst things one might face in life. Any war. Anywhere. Wars do not just kill priceless lives. Wars kill hopes and aspirations, freeze or destroy relationships and connections. Including this war,” he said.

Dvorkovich added that FIDE was “making sure there are no official chess activities in Russia or Belarus, and that players are not allowed to represent Russia or Belarus in official or rated events until the war is over and Ukrainian players are back in chess.”

As the war in Ukraine rages, ordinary Russians face a degree of international isolation not seen in decades. What will Putin do next?

FIDE banned a top Russian player for six months for his vocal support of Putin and the invasion.

Two days after Dvorkovich’s comments, a top official in Putin’s United Russia party demanded he be fired as chair of the state-backed Skolkovo Foundation. Last week, the foundation reported that Dvorkovich decided to step down.

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Lilia Gildeyeva

Lilia Gildeyeva was a longtime anchor at the state-funded NTV channel, which for two decades has carefully toed the Kremlin line. She quit the job and left Russia shortly after the invasion.

She told the independent Insider news site this week that she decided “to stop all this” on Feb. 24, the first day of the invasion.

“It was an immediate nervous breakdown,” she said. “For several days I couldn’t pull myself together. The decision was probably obvious right away. There won’t be any more work.”

As Russia cracks down on antiwar protests, those voicing dissent face heightened danger. Social media companies have taken measures to address threats to users in those regions.

Gildeyeva said news coverage on state TV channels was tightly controlled by the authorities, with channels getting orders from officials. She admitted to having gone along with it since 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and began supporting a separatist insurgency in Ukraine.

“When you gradually give in to yourself, you don’t notice the depth of the fall. And at some point, you find yourself face to face with the picture that leads to Feb. 24,” she said.

Zhanna Agalakova

Zhanna Agalakova was a journalist for another state-run TV channel, Channel One, spending more than 20 years there and working as an anchor and then a correspondent in Paris, New York and other Western cities.

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News reports of Agalakova quitting her job began emerging three weeks after the invasion.

This week, she gave a news conference in Paris confirming the reports and explaining her decision.

“We have come to a point when on TV, on the news, we’re seeing the story of only one person — or the group of people around him. All we see are those in power. In our news, we don’t have the country. In our news, we don’t have Russia,” Agalakova said.

Referring to the 2014 annexation of Crimea and the support of the separatists in eastern Ukraine, she said that she “could not hide from the propaganda anymore,” even as a foreign correspondent. Agalakova said she had to “only talk about the bad things happening in the U.S.”

“My reports didn’t contain lies, but that’s exactly how propaganda works: You take reliable facts, mix them up, and a big lie comes together. Facts are true, but their mix is propaganda,” she said.

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