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7th January 2026 14:33
Link to Post #441
Avalon Member
Re: Life in Russia
It is extremely hard to find real news in real time about Russia. I find that the Website Meduza is a valuable source of information. Frequently, you can find news about Russia that is not printed elsewhere. If you have any doubts about the veracity of the information, you can always attempt to verify it with other sources. Of course, this should be done with all news sources, especially the BBC, NBC, CNN, FOX, etc.
In 2014, Galina Timchenko (the site's founder and owner) was fired from her job as chief editor at Lenta.ru by oligarch Alexander Mamut, a supporter of Vladimir Putin, after she had interviewed Right Sector leader Dmytro Yarosh. She launched the new webpage Meduza on 25 October 2014. Several former journalists of Lenta.ru joined the new online site. The site is based in Riga, Latvia, primarily made up of Russian journalists reporting on Russia.
For the record, at one time, Meduza received funding from programs supported by the U.S. government. In February 2025, it was reported that Meduza had received approximately 15 percent of its annual budget from initiatives funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). This funding came to a halt when the Trump administration abruptly suspended all foreign assistance.
Here is some news that you are not going to read elsewhere about Russian and please feel free to verify the facts as you should do with all news sources.
What’s changing in Russia in 2026?
Russia’s conscription system becomes year-round

Russian conscripts say goodbye to their loved ones at a train station in Kazan. November 20, 2025.
At the very end of 2025, President Vladimir Putin signed a decree mandating that Russian conscription offices operate year-round, rather than only during the country’s traditional spring and fall draft campaigns. From January 1 through December 31, 2026, the military plans to conscript 261,000 men for compulsory service.
Avoiding conscription is also set to become harder once a new digital system for automatically imposing restrictions on conscripts who ignore military summonses becomes fully operational.
Minimum prices for hard liquor rise again
Beginning January 1, 2026, vodka may no longer be sold for less than 409 rubles ($5.11) for a half-liter bottle — an increase of 50 rubles ($0.62). The minimum price for a half-liter of brandy rose to 605 rubles ($7.56, up 133 rubles, or $1.66), while cognac now has a floor price of 755 rubles ($9.43, up 104 rubles, or $1.30).
The Finance Ministry order setting these minimum alcohol prices is formally in effect through December 31, 2031. In practice, however, it is reviewed annually — and the minimum retail price for vodka has risen steadily every year since 2015.
VAT increases to 22 percent
As of January 1, 2026, Russia’s value-added tax rose from 20 percent to 22 percent. The reduced 10 percent rate for socially essential goods remains unchanged.
The higher rate now applies to all goods, work, services, and property rights shipped, performed, rendered, or transferred on or after January 1.
Other significant — and unwelcome — tax changes include a lower income threshold for paying VAT under the simplified tax system and for using the patent tax system. Both are widely used by small businesses, which will now have to hand over a larger share of their revenues to the state.
The Kremlins new tax hike aims to plug a record deficit to fund the war.
Annual asset declarations for officials scrapped
This year, Russian officials will stop submitting annual income declarations to oversight bodies. Going forward, they will be required to file declarations only in strictly defined cases: before an appointment or transfer to a new position, before inclusion in the federal personnel reserve, and in the event of major expenditures.
At the end of 2022, Putin allowed officials — including himself — to stop publishing their declarations online or submitting them to the media for the duration of the full-scale war against Ukraine. What was initially framed as a temporary measure has now become permanent: public disclosure of officials’ declarations has been abolished altogether.
Monthly minimum wage goes up to nearly $340
As of January 1, the monthly federal minimum wage increased by 4,653 rubles ($58.13) to 27,093 rubles ($338.45), provided an employee works a full standard month.
This figure sets the nationwide floor. Regions may establish a higher minimum wage; where no regional rate exists, the federal minimum wage applies.
Income tax for ‘foreign agents’ rises well above the norm
The authorities have introduced a flat 30 percent personal income tax rate for individuals designated as “foreign agents,” regardless of whether they are tax residents of Russia. The same rate already applies to non-residents. By contrast, most Russians pay income tax at rates ranging from 13 to 22 percent, depending on their earnings.
In addition, people labeled as “foreign agents” have been stripped of tax deductions and the right to claim tax exemptions.
Moscow starts using AI to automatically detect crimes
A new federal law authorizing the “experiment,” along with amendments to Russia’s Administrative Code, now allows the city of Moscow to use artificial intelligence to automatically identify misdemeanor violations. The system will rely on the city’s video surveillance network, as well as cameras mounted on vehicles and drones.
The AI-based monitoring will cover:- protection of cultural heritage sites;
- regional construction oversight;
- environmental monitoring;
- oversight of protected natural areas;
- transport and road infrastructure supervision;
- monitoring the protection and use of urban soils;
- enforcement of rules governing the protection of green spaces.
The pilot program is set to run for three years.

Russia’s Central Bank doubles the list of red flags for fraudulent transactions
The Central Bank has expanded its list of indicators used to identify potentially fraudulent money transfers made without a customer’s voluntary consent — from six to 12.
New red flags include:- transfers exceeding 200,000 rubles (about $2,500) between a customer’s own accounts via the fast payments system, followed within 24 hours by an attempt to send money to another person to whom the customer has not transferred funds in the past six months;
- using a new Internet service provider;
- changing a SIM card.
If any of these indicators are detected, banks will be required to freeze the transfer for 48 hours, inform the customer of the reason, and ask them to confirm the transaction. Customers may insist on proceeding with the transfer — but if the funds ultimately go to scammers, the bank won’t reimburse the loss.
Utility tariffs rise — the first of two hikes this year
In 2026, household utility tariffs in Russia will be raised twice: on January 1 and again on October 1. The first increase, effective at the start of the year, averages 1.7 percent nationwide and is tied to the hike in the value-added tax from 20 to 22 percent.
A second, more substantial increase is scheduled for October. The exact rate will vary by region, ranging from 8 percent to as much as 19.7 percent.
The FSB regains its own remand prisons

For several decades, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) lacked its own pre-trial detention centers — a consequence of Russia’s obligations under the Council of Europe to uphold human rights standards. Those constraints are now gone. Russia left the Council of Europe in 2022, and as of January 1, the security service once again has its own prisons.
Human rights advocates warn that the move could worsen conditions for defendants held in FSB custody.
https://meduza.io/en/slides/what-s-c...russia-in-2026
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7th January 2026 20:23
Link to Post #442