Daughter of Russian senator opposed war and left her homeland

Diana Isakova, 25-year-old daughter of a member of the Federation Council Eduard Isakov from her first marriage, spoke out on social networks against the war in Ukraine and left Russia. This was reported in the article of the Russian BBC service.

According to Isakova, she went to opposition rallies and tried to arrange anti -war shares, one of which ended with an interrogation at the FSB. “We can say that I did not choose this power, but I indulged her with my silence, inaction and fear for my life, although I knew about her cruelty and immorality.”

April 17, Isakov says, she was detained when she distributed anti -war leaflets. Then she was interrogated for six hours in the police. The next day, she was summoned for the interrogation of the FSB and in the evening information about her action reached her father.

“I found out that he did not just recognize, and an incredible number of officials called him, and in the end [Chairman of the Federation Council Valentin] Matvienko told him about this,” says Isakova.

The girl’s father Eduard Isakov – a senator from the Khanty -Mansi Autonomous Okrug, is in the sanctions lists of Great Britain, the European Union and Canada. The war in Ukraine is expressed as “the fight against the Nazis”, and the Russians opposing the invasion proposed to be sent for compulsory work in the Donbass.

After the interrogation of her daughter to the FSB, the senator demanded that she move out of the house. Diana Isakova lived in Sochi for the past five years in a house belonging to him. “Everything that I expected, he told me that I am an enemy of the family, the enemy of the people, the criminal. And that I was not his daughter, he said later,” Isakova said.

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In the summer, the girl decided to leave Russia and express an anti -war position as publicly as possible. She herself contacted the BBC and the publication “Medusa” with a proposal to give an interview.