User:Pavlostani/sandbox

Article evaluation
There is outdated information regarding plans to create a Tanya Grotter video game in 2008.

Most recent source is from 2007.

The article does a good job of writing from the perspective of the author, audience, and Rowling's lawyers.

Some references have non-functional links.

Most topics in the talk page regard confusions over translation. It is rated start class to multiple wikiprojects, and is of mid-importance to Wikiproject Russia/Language and Literature.

Boris Nemtsov
Article contains extremely limited information on censorship Nemtsov experienced before his assassination. The one reference to state repression he experienced lacks citations. Article does not say what happened to Nemtsov's confiscated papers/hard drives. The article lacks virtually all information about the "Chechen Plot" explanation for Nemtsov's death.

Alexander Litvinenko
Article lacks information on why Litvinenko had been ordered not to leave Moscow. Article does not say why Russian media ignored Litvinenko's poisoning.

Tanya Grotter
This article does not contain any sources from after 2007. Additionally, though the article presents Yemets' argument, it lacks a nuanced view of the copyright struggle.

Boris Nemtsov Draft
First imma throw in a bunch of articles with s p i c y info to cite

Under "Aftermath, context, and accusations"

Nemtsov's friend and co-author of "Putin and War" Ilya Yashin suggests that Nemtsov was killed to prevent the distribution of "Putin and War." Public opinion in Russia has turned against involvement in Ukraine, meaning that the distribution of "Putin and War" would be costly for the Putin government. Yashin claims Nemtsov's killing has cultivated an atmosphere of fear that made stakeholders in the "Putin and War" report unwilling to cooperate with the authors. Yashin also points to the police confiscation of Nemtsov's documents and hard drives following his death as a major impediment to the authorship of "Putin and War". Yashin claims print shops are being pressured into not distributing "Putin and War", which is consistent with prior forms of opposition censorship in Russia. In spite of these forms of information control, Yashin says that the public fear brought on by Nemtsov's death was the largest challenge to publishing "Putin and War."

The following is a revision to the section regarding the Chechen implication:

The alleged shooter, Zaur Dadayev, is a former officer in the security force of Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, who was also accused by opposition leader Ilya Yashin of having murdered Nemtsov. Dadayev publicly admitted to killing Nemtsov due to Nemtsov's support for the Charlie Hebdo cartoonists. However, Dadayev later denied involvement in the crime and claimed he had been tortured by police to confess. Upon examination by human rights groups, Dadayev and the other Chechens were discovered to have wounds consistent with torture.