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    Home»Media workers»Kuznetsov Vladimir
    Kuznetsov Vladimir
    Media workers

    Kuznetsov Vladimir

    Mia HarrisBy Mia HarrisFebruary 11, 2022No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Kuznetsov Vladimir Date of Birth

    11 November 1986

    Kuznetsov Vladimir Citizenship

    Russia

    Kuznetsov Vladimir Professional field/official position 

    Pranker

    Kuznetsov Vladimir biography

    Vladimir Kuznetsov Vladimir Kuznetsov, also known as the Pranker Vovan, was born on August 17, 1984, in Novorossiysk. There is no available information about his early years and origin, but as he claims, he received a law degree. Kuznetsov started making prank phone calls in 2007.

    • In 2011, he moved to Moscow to work in one of the tabloids. At some point, the young man was noticed by people close to the Kremlin, and he began carrying out political pranks in the interests of the government. Kuznetsov first gained fame in 2011, when he made a prank phone call to the then-Chairman of the Central Election Commission, Vladimir Churov. However, Vovan gained nationwide fame by collaborating with Alexei Stolyarov, Pranker Lexus, against the internal and external opponents of the Kremlin.
    • In 2016, Kuznetsov and his colleague hosted the Call show on the NTV federal channel. The men were also hosts of the Telephone Guys program at the Komsomolskaya Pravda radio station. The pranksters admitted that they had previously received payments from the LifeNews propaganda channel.

    Kuznetsov Vladimir crimes

    1. Intentional attempts to provoke political opponents of the Kremlin.

    Together with Stolyarov-Lexus, they phoned the opposition politician Boris Nemtsov (later murdered near the Kremlin), trying to make him act irrationally, as well as the late Valeria Novodvorskaya, pretending to be Anna Politkovskaya and Pavel Astakhov, who had already been killed by then. However, the most significant incident was the conflict between the pranksters and the member of the Standing Committee of the Free Russia Forum, Mark Feygin, when he was an attorney for the captured Ukrainian officer Nadezhda Savchenko. The conflict erupted in March 2016, after the appearance of a fake letter addressed to Savchenko, allegedly from the President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko. The fake letter said that “the issue will be resolved in favor of the truth soon” and that there is no need for a hunger strike. After it became known that it was the pranksters who wrote a letter to Savchenko, Feygin announced his intention to take legal action against the pranksters for violating the confidentiality of correspondence, and they, in turn, attempted to provoke Feygin for a physical altercation in one of Moscow cafes. A month later, the investigating authorities of Ukraine opened a case against Stolyarov and Kuznetsov.

    2. Spreading negative information about Ukraine and assisting the occupation administrations of “DPR”, “LPR” and “The Republic of Crimea.”

    The activities of pro-Kremlin pranksters reached their peak with the outbreak of the Kremlin’s armed aggression against Ukraine. They, easily obtaining phone numbers, called Igor Kolomoisky, Dmitry Yarosh, Mikhail Saakashvili, Vitali Klitschko, and President Petro Poroshenko. After the release of the call with Poroshenko, the Ukrainian president’s press secretary accused the pranksters of working for the Russian security agencies. According to The Guardian journalist Shaw Walker, who investigated the pranksters, “the vast majority of the victims of their political pranks are Ukrainians, and their work very often aligns with the objectives set by the Kremlin and provides information that may be useful to it.”

    In November 2015, prankers said that they had pranked the initiators of the civil blockade of Crimea, Mustafa Dzhemilev and Lenur Islyamov, and allegedly found out the identity of the person who blew up electric power lines in the Kherson region. A member of the Ukrainian parliament Anton Gerashchenko said in response to the appearance of the “prank-investigation” that its authors work for Russian special services, which organized the power line explosions in the Kherson region, and the evidence they used can be used against Crimean Tatar activists in the annexed Crimea.

    3. Provocations against world leaders.

    In February 2017, prankers called the NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg on behalf of the Ukrainian President and some American congressmen on behalf of Prime Minister of Ukraine Volodymyr Groysman, discussing plans for Ukraine’s accession to NATO. Later, they called Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson. By trolling and using misinformation, prankers Lexus and Vovan provided all possible assistance to the security and intelligence agencies of the Russian Federation, misleading political leaders when the Kremlin had tense relations with these countries, “probing” them for vulnerable positions and provoking them for ambiguous statements.

    Phone provocations of Kuznetsov’s and his colleague always coincided with the state information agenda, their records were broadcasted in the programs of federal TV channels. All of these conversations were aimed at compromising the victim, discussed as a “sensation” by pro-Kremlin propaganda media. In turn, the propaganda used these attempts to humiliate the opponents of the Kremlin as a form of entertainment for the Russian audience, and the Russian security agencies used them to collect specific information and to form a psychological portrait of the victims, their level of awareness and plans. Consequently, pro-Kremlin prankers should be considered as one of the levers of the sabotage-propaganda, the hybrid war of Putin’s dictatorship against the opposition and the West. According to Mark Feygin, it is highly unlikely that prankers, “who know the phones and emails of top officials from everywhere, are simple small cheaters.”

    Kuznetsov Vladimir, links and materials

    • Pranker Vovan
    • Prank instead of intelligence. Why Moscow pits pranksters against its “enemies
    • Happy to Be a Weapon: Russian Prank-Callers Target Kremlin Opponents
    • Kremlin calling? Meet the Russian pranksters who say ‘Elton owes us’
    • “Pranksters” are not afraid of dirt: who is behind the prank leaders of the Crimea blockade?
    • Feygin: A criminal case was opened against Russian pranksters Vovan and Lexus in Ukraine
    Kuznetsov Vladimir
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