Congresses and Docs

Memorandum of Political Alternative, an updated version of 1.03.2019

Memorandum of Political Alternative

YABLOKO's Ten Key Programme Issues

THE DEMOCRATIC MANIFESTO

YABLOKO's Political Platform Adopted by the 15th Congress, June 21, 2008

The 18th Congress of YABLOKO

RUSSIA DEMANDS CHANGES! Electoral Program for 2011 Parliamentary Elections.

Key resolutions by the Congress:

On Stalinism and Bolshevism
Resolution. December 21, 2009

On Anti-Ecological Policies of Russia’s Authorities. Resolution of the 15th congress of the YABLOKO party No 253, December 24, 2009

On the Situation in the Northern Caucasus. Resolution of the 15th congress of the YABLOKO party No 252, December 24, 2009

YABLOKO's POLITICAL COMMITTEE DECISIONS:

YABLOKO’s Political Committee: Russian state acts like an irresponsible business corporation conducting anti-environmental policies

 

Overcoming bolshevism and stalinism as a key factor for Russia¦µ™s transformation in the 21st century

 

On Russia's Foreign Policies. Political Committee of hte YABLOKO party. Statement, June 26, 2009

 

On Iran’s Nuclear Problem Resolution by the Political Committee of the YABLOKO party. October 6, 2009

 

Anti-Crisis Proposals (Housing-Roads-Land) of the Russian United Democratic Party YABLOKO. Handed to President Medvedev by Sergei Mitrokhin on June 11, 2009

Brief Outline of Sergei Mitrokhin’s Report at the State Council meeting. January 22, 2010

 

Assessment of Russia’s Present Political System and the Principles of Its Development. Brief note for the State Council meeting (January 22, 2010) by Dr.Grigory Yavlinsky, member of YABLOKO’s Political Committee. January 22, 2010

 

Address of the YABLOKO party to President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Medvedev. Political Committee of the YABLOKO party. October 9, 2009

 

The 17th Congress of YABLOKO

 

 

 

The 16th Congress of Yabloko

Photo by Sergei Loktionov

The 12th congress of Yabloko


The 11th congress of Yabloko


The 10th congress of Yabloko

Moscow Yabloko
Yabloko for Students
St. Petersburg Yabloko
Khabarovsk Yabloko
Irkutsk Yabloko
Kaliningrad Yabloko(eng)
Novosibirsk Yabloko
Rostov Yabloko
Yekaterinburg Yabloko
(Sverdlovsk Region)

Krasnoyarsk Yabloko
Ulyanovsk Yabloko
Tomsk Yabloko
Tver Yabloko(eng)
Penza Yabloko
Stavropol Yabloko

Action of Support

 

Archives

SOON!

FOR YOUR INTEREST!

Programme by candidate for the post of Russian President Grigory Yavlinsky. Brief Overview

My Truth

Grigory Yavlinsky at Forum 2000, Prague, 2014

Grigory Yavlinsky : “If you show the white feather, you will get fascism”

Grigory Yavlinsky: a coup is started by idealists and controlled by rascals

The Road to Good Governance

Risks of Transitions. The Russian Experience

Grigory Yavlinsky on the Russian coup of August 1991

A Male’s Face of Russia’s Politics

Realeconomik

The Hidden Cause of the Great Recession (And How to Avert the Nest One)

by Dr. Grigory Yavlinsky

What does the opposition want: to win or die heroically?
Moskovsky Komsomolets web-site, July 11, 2012. Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky by Yulia Kalinina.

Lies and legitimacy
The founder of the Yabloko Party analyses the political situation. Article by Grigory Yavlinsky on radio Svoboda. April 6, 2011

Algorithms for Opposing Gender Discrimination: the International and the Russian Experience

Is Modernisation in Russia Possible? Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky and Boris Titov by Yury Pronko, "The Real Time" programme, Radio Finam, May 12, 2010

Grigory Yavlinsky's interview to Vladimir Pozner. The First Channel, programme "Pozner", April 20, 2010 (video and transcript)

Overcoming the Totalitarian Past: Foreign Experience and Russian Problems by Galina Mikhaleva. Research Centre for the East European Studies, Bremen, February 2010.

Grigory Yavlinsky: Vote for the people you know, people you can turn for help. Grigory Yavlinsky’s interview to the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper, October 8, 2009

Grigory Yavlinsky: no discords in the tandem. Grigory Yavlinsky’s interview to the Radio Liberty
www.svobodanews.ru
September 22, 2009

A Credit for Half a Century. Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky by Natalia Bekhtereva, Radio Russia, June 15, 2009

Sergei Mitrokhin's Speech at the meeting with US Preseident Barack Obama. Key Notes, Moscow, July 7, 2009

Mitrokhin proposed a visa-free regime between Russia and EU at the European liberal leaders meeting
June 18, 2009

Demodernization
by Grigory Yavlinsky

Reforms that corrupted Russia
By Grigory Yavlinsky, Financial Times (UK), September 3, 2003

Grigory Yavlinsky: "It is impossible to create a real opposition in Russia today."
Moskovsky Komsomolets, September 2, 2003

Alexei Arbatov: What Should We Do About Chechnya?
Interview with Alexei Arbatov by Mikhail Falaleev
Komsomolskaya Pravda, November 9, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky: Our State Does Not Need People
Novaya Gazeta,
No. 54, July 29, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky: The Door to Europe is in Washington
Obschaya Gazeta, May 16, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky's speech.
March 11, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky's Lecture at the Nobel Institute
Oslo, May 30, 2000

IT IS IMPORTANT!

 

Position on Some Important Strategic Issues of Russian-American Relations

Moscow, July 7, 2009

The Embrace of Stalinism

By Arseny Roginsky, 16 December 2008

Nuclear Umbrellas and the Need for Understanding: IC Interview With Ambassador Lukin
September 25, 1997

Would the West’s Billions Pay Off?
Los Angeles Times
By Grigory Yavlinsky and Graham Allison
June 3, 1991

Yabloko Deputy Chairman Lev Shlosberg to remain in pre-trial detention until 21 November, contrary to the position of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation

Press Release, 6.06.2026

Photo: Lev Shlosberg at the court hearing on 5 June 2026 / Photo by Pskov Yabloko

A judge of Pskov Regional Court dismissed the appeals lodged by defence counsel Vladimir Danilov and Vera Kovalchuk against the ruling of a judge of Pskov City Court, by which Yabloko Deputy Chairman Lev Shlosberg’s pre-trial detention had been extended by six months.

The hearing took place on 5 June and was open to the public. The politician participated via video link, Pskov Yabloko reports.

 

Lev Shlosberg requested an adjournment, having been informed of the hearing only the previous evening; that morning he had been unable to speak with his defence counsel because inmates at the remand centre were sitting state examinations in the secure consultation rooms.

 

However, the prosecutor objected to postponement, arguing that the politician could communicate with his counsel via video link. The judge called a recess until 15:00.

 

After the recess, the court proceeded to consider the appeals. Vladimir Danilov spoke first. He argued that the prosecution had presented no evidence to justify Shlosberg’s continued detention. There were no factual circumstances or reliable grounds to conclude that he might abscond, exert pressure on witnesses, or continue “engaging in criminal activity”. Rather than evidence, the prosecution had relied on conjecture and supposition, invoking the formulation “high risks exist”, contrary to the Code of Criminal Procedure and the Ruling of the Plenum of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation No. 41 of 19 December 2013.

 

Адвокат подчеркнул, что Лев Шлосберг соблюдал все ранее избранные меры пресечения, у него есть постоянное место жительства, семья и работа, а загранпаспорт хранится в полиции. Это говорит о том, что скрываться политик не намерен, как и продолжать заниматься преступной деятельностью, которой и раньше не занимался. Защитник напомнил: председатель ВС РФ Игорь Краснов на совещании судей в феврале 2026 года сказал, что судам рекомендовано шире применять домашний арест и переходить к более строгой мере лишь в случае её нарушения.

 

The defence counsel stressed that Lev Shlosberg had complied with all previously imposed restrictive measures, had a permanent place of residence, a family, and employment, and that his foreign travel document was held by the police. This demonstrated that the politician had no intention of absconding, nor of continuing any criminal activity – activity he had not engaged in previously. The counsel further recalled that Supreme Court Chairman Igor Krasnov, at a judicial conference in February 2026, had stated that courts were recommended to apply house arrest more widely and to move to more stringent measures only in the event of a breach.

 

Lev Shlosberg then addressed the court. He began by noting that 5 June marked exactly six months since he had been held in pre-trial detention.

 

The politician stressed that the representative of the regional public prosecutor’s office had not submitted any written justification for a further six-month extension at the city court hearing, and that the ruling of the first-instance court had not even identified by name the individuals who had provided personal surety guarantees for his compliance with non-custodial measures.

 

Since one of the prosecution’s arguments for continued detention was the gravity of the alleged offence — Article 207.3 Part 2 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (“false statements about the armed forces”) — Lev Shlosberg considered it necessary to address this directly:

 

“The publication attributed to me does not contain a single word of mine, which means it is impossible to establish the motive of political hatred used to classify the offence as a serious crime.”

 

The politician noted that the case had been opened by an unauthorised body — the Department of the Interior for the Pskov Region — and that the sole body empowered to bring proceedings under the article in question, the Investigative Committee, had twice declined to do so.

 

“The police have no right to investigate this criminal case, and the court had no right to accept it,” Lev Shlosberg concluded.

 

Lev Shlosberg drew particular attention to the fact that, while in pre-trial detention, he had been denied contact with his father, with whom he had lived his entire life. His father, who had turned 97, was a person with a disability and was financially dependent on his son.

 

The prosecutor cited the grounds, repeated on numerous previous occasions at other hearings, on which the prosecution considered it impossible to relax the restrictive measure imposed on Lev Shlosberg: his status as a foreign agent, the risk of absconding, and the risk of continuing “criminal activity”. Jurisdiction, in her view, had not been violated: the decision on jurisdiction had been taken by the Public Prosecutor’s Office of the Pskov Region.

 

At Lev Shlosberg’s request, the judge read out the character reference submitted by Yabloko party Chairman Nikolai Rybakov.

 

Following a further recess, the judge delivered the decision: the ruling of the first-instance court was left unchanged and the appeals were dismissed.