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Why Russia is threatening to ban Wikipedia over Ukraine war

The Kremlin is threatening to block Wikipedia from users in Russia because of an entry about the invasion of Ukraine that includes facts and figures detailing ༒Russian military casualties as well as the number of dead Ukrainian civilians.

The editors of Wikipedia’s Russian language site , the government’s censorship bureau, which warned the editors that violates Russian law, according to Twitter user Aric Toler.

As of 9am Eastern time on Wednesday, the Wikipedia entry listed the number of Russian and Ukrainian casualties — though estimates provided by the authorities from both countries vary.

According to Ukrainian officials, 352 civilians have been killed by the invasion while 1,684 were wounded. More than 11🌠0 Ukrainians soldiers have died in fighting.

Censors told Wikipedia that the article “contains false messages about terrorist attacks or other kind of information of public concern disseminated under the guise of reliable information that threatens life and (or) health of citizens…”

Russian Wikipedia page
The Kremlin is warning the editors of the page that they are in danger of violating federal Russian law if they do not remove the entry. Kirill Kukhmar

The𒐪 Russian government says 200🔥 Ukrainian soldiers were killed compared to just two Russian soldiers.

Ukraine, meanwhile, says that the number of Russian military casualties is much higher — 5,710 soldiers dead and 200 taken prisoner.

The tweet by Toler , which confirmed the authenticity of the Russian govern﷽ment memo.

An editor for the Russian language Wikipedia page told Motherboard that Roskomnadzor has sent them dozens of similar memos demanding c🎶ensorship of pages over the years.

The editor told Motherboard that it is likely they will not respond to the memo — except to add more sources to the article.

The Russian acronym Roskomnadzor stands for the “Federal Service for Supervision of Communication, Information Technology, and Mass Media.”

Wikipedia building
The editors of the Russian language Wikipedia site said they have no plans to respond to the government’s demands for censorship. Jeremy Moeller

The Wikimedia Foundation on Tuesday said that it was “actively working with affected communities to identify potential threats to information on Wikimedia projects, and supporting volunteer editors and administrators who serve as a first line of defense against manipulation of facts and knowledge.”