Tehuty News
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • World

    Death of Venezuelan opposition figure in custody ‘vile’, US says

    Fire at popular India nightclub kills 23, Goa officials say

    Legendary US architect dies aged 96

    Police arrest suspect in DC pipe bomb incident, ending years-long manhunt

    Drunk raccoon found passed out on liquor store floor after breaking in

    Flood catastrophe awakens volunteerism in Sri Lanka

    Trump releases fraudster executive days into prison sentence

    Ukraine talks ‘productive’ but more work needed, Rubio says

    More than 70,000 killed in Gaza since Israel offensive began, Hamas-run health ministry says

  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • More
    • Culture
    • Music
10 °c
London
15 ° Thu
16 ° Fri
8 ° Sat
7 ° Sun
No Result
View All Result

Welcome to Tehuty News

Monday, December 8, 2025
Tehuty News
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • World

    Death of Venezuelan opposition figure in custody ‘vile’, US says

    Fire at popular India nightclub kills 23, Goa officials say

    Legendary US architect dies aged 96

    Police arrest suspect in DC pipe bomb incident, ending years-long manhunt

    Drunk raccoon found passed out on liquor store floor after breaking in

    Flood catastrophe awakens volunteerism in Sri Lanka

    Trump releases fraudster executive days into prison sentence

    Ukraine talks ‘productive’ but more work needed, Rubio says

    More than 70,000 killed in Gaza since Israel offensive began, Hamas-run health ministry says

  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • More
    • Culture
    • Music
No Result
View All Result
Tehuty News
No Result
View All Result
Home Sports

Nadya Karpova: The Russia striker speaking out against war in Ukraine

June 7, 2022
in Sports
9 min read
314 10
0
352
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Nadya Karpova
Karpova has played 24 times for Russia and has relatives in Ukraine

Nadya Karpova’s full first name – Nadezhda – means ‘hope’ in Russian. She has a small tattoo with the word in English on the front of her neck. She had it done when she was 21, but doesn’t even remember what hopes she had at that time. Now it has real significance.

Related posts

Watch the key moments as Selby beats Trump in UK Championship final

December 8, 2025

Mohamed Salah: Liverpool star’s public attack piles pressure on Arne Slot

December 7, 2025

Since Russia invaded Ukraine in the early hours of 24 February, only a small number of Russian sportspeople have spoken out against it.

Among the country’s current international footballers, just three have done so.

From the Russian men’s team, Dynamo Moscow’s Fedor Smolov posted a ‘No war!’ message on Instagram in February. He has been silent since. Aleksandr Sobolev from Spartak Moscow also posted a message on the day the war started but deleted it a few hours later.

Karpova, who plays club football for Espanyol in Spain, is the third. She is the only member of the Russian women’s team to have voiced her opposition, and she does so almost every day. Since the war started, more than three months ago, she has been posting anti-war messages on Instagram, where she has 143,000 followers.

“I can’t just look at this inhumanity and stay silent,” she says. “I don’t know what would happen if I was in Russia, not in Spain, but I feel a special responsibility to speak out.”

Our interview takes place in Barcelona, where the 27-year-old lives, having moved to Spain in 2017. She has played 24 times for Russia, including at the last European Championship, five years ago. The next are just around the corner – in England from 6-31 July – but the Russian team won’t be there. They are banned – a result of the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

Meeting at a Chinese restaurant, she doesn’t touch her food once we start talking about Ukraine. She’d arrived early, hungry, and ordered hotpot; a broth that’s placed on to a small stove burner built into the table. Diners finish the dish themselves – adding vegetables, meat and noodles.

While we are talking, the broth starts to bubble, then boil away. Karpova doesn’t even look at it.

She is careful with her words. But it is not that she is trying to censor herself – even though a new Russian law can lead to up to 15 years in jail for spreading anything the authorities consider to be ‘fake news’ about the military.

She isn’t afraid to say something wrong, as is common among Russian athletes. Instead she is afraid of forgetting something important. And she is also trying hard not to speak only in swear words. The longer the interview goes on, the less careful she becomes.

“Russian propaganda is trying to persuade Russians that we are a very special nation and the whole world is against us and our ‘unique mission’,” she says.

“What unique mission are you talking about? I don’t think that Russians are special. At the same time, I am not ashamed to be Russian, as Russia doesn’t mean the government and Vladimir Putin.

“Putin took everything from us, he took our future. At the same time, he did it with our tacit consent. They [the government], didn’t witness strong resistance. Most people were just closing their eyes to injustice, thinking it’s not their business.

“I took part in two opposition rallies, the last one in support of [the main Russian opposition figure Alexei] Navalny when he was poisoned and imprisoned, but still, I don’t think that I’ve done enough.

“These people who justify the war, they are hostages to propaganda. I feel sorry for them, and I believe we need to do everything to release them from it.”

Nadya Karpova
Russia are banned from Euro 2022, being held in England from 6-31 July

Karpova was 22 when she arrived in Spain. Valencia had seen enough to offer her a contract after Euro 2017, even though she only made three substitute appearances as Russia failed to reach the knockout stage in the Netherlands.

A year earlier she’d been ‘Backed by Lionel Messi’ – the only female among nine young footballers from all over the world chosen to feature alongside the Argentine in an Adidas advertisement campaign.

Karpova’s main motivation for relocation was mainly the level of women’s football. The weather was a factor too – it is not much fun to play football in winter in Russia. But after moving to Spain, something fundamental changed within her.

“I stopped being afraid of certain things, for instance to speak out,” she says. “I also understood that no one would blame me for living with a girl and that there is no stigma here for being a lesbian.

“Your coach can ask you here: ‘Will your girlfriend come to a game?’ I just thought wow. In Russia, people only ask if you have a boyfriend, here they say ‘partner’ – ‘pareja’.

Since childhood, Karpova had been trying to hide her homosexuality, or least not to talk about it publicly. She tells a story about talks over her first professional contract.

The owner of the club, Rossiyanka, was trying to persuade her father to sign, promising that they would “look after your daughter, a lesbian”.

Karpova says: “According to these people, lesbians needed special treatment. I was 18 then. My dad told this guy to… go away. He said that he was ready to discuss only football, not my sexual orientation.

“The difference between here and Russia, as an LGBT person, was huge.”

In 2013, the ‘promotion of homosexuality’ among minors was made illegal in Russia under a new law supporters said was designed to protect so-called “traditional Russian values”.

There are no openly gay national team athletes in Russia. Karpova has never spoken publicly about her sexuality before. She even only told her mother a year ago.

“It’s not a secret to anybody that the main problem of gay kids is that you are always in the closet,” she says. “You are afraid to be judged by society. And when your state becomes the one who bullies you, it’s just absurd.

“Now Russian propaganda is trying to discredit people who speak out against the war, by outing them.

“For instance, when Margarita Simonyan [editor-in-chief of state media outlet RT], was talking about [comedian and presenter] Maxim Galkin’s anti-war position, she said: ‘He is actually gay!’ Like being gay means that you are a bad, disgusting person with no moral values.”

Nadya Karpova
Karpova has also played for Sevilla and Valencia in Spain, moving to Espanyol in 2020

In March, Karpova was joined at Espanyol by fellow striker Tamila Khimych, who is Ukrainian.

“When I first met with her, she looked at me cautiously,” Karpova says. “Like she was not sure if I was pro-war and considered Ukrainians enemies.

“I wanted to cry. I was thinking about her family and friends, and if they are OK. It was such a horrible feeling to understand that she could lose loved ones.

“I’m just overwhelmed with emotions. I still can’t believe sometimes that it is real, and it is happening.”

Karpova was very glad to learn that her new team-mate’s relatives are safe. But thousands have been killed, a lot of Ukrainians are still in danger as the war continues, and no one knows when it will end.

She admits that she is very glad that her current job is not connected to the Russian state in any way – in contrast to most professional Russian athletes. She thinks that it will probably be wise to skip a trip to Russia to visit her parents and friends this summer.

But still, she hopes for change.

“I wish more and more Russians – Russian athletes too – would speak out so other people who are against the war know that they are not a minority,” she says.

“You can’t just pretend that nothing is happening, not any more. The time of silence should be over.

“They [this government] will go away one day, they are all old. When this happens, we will still be alive, and we should be ready to sort everything out.

“I hope it will happen very soon.”



Source link

Previous Post

Shoppers spent less for second month in a row, says BRC

Next Post

The Ethiopians changing their names as a show of pride

Next Post

The Ethiopians changing their names as a show of pride

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Barry Ferguson: What did we learn from Rangers unveiling?

10 months ago

Cloud gaming: Are game streaming services bad for the planet?

5 years ago

WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook apps hit by outage

2 years ago

Rory McIlroy retains Canadian Open title for first win of 2022

3 years ago

FOLLOW US

  • 138 Followers
  • 79.6k Followers
  • 207k Subscribers

BROWSE BY CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Have your say
  • In Pictures
  • Politics
  • Reel
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Top News
  • World

BROWSE BY TOPICS

America animation B.B.C. bbc BBC iPlayer B B Ci Player bbcnews BBC NEWS BBC Reel bbcreel breaking news British TV british tv shows documentaire documental documentaries documentary documentary film facts factual features free documentary full documentary funny History india India news iPlayer music NEWS physics reel science Streaming top documentaries TV United Kingdom usa us news Video watch british tv online watch british tv shows online watch uk tv online World world news

Top Stories

  • Twitter tags Trump tweet with fact-checking warning

    356 shares
    Share 142 Tweet 89
  • Chancellor says she can be trusted with the UK’s finances despite claims she misled the public

    351 shares
    Share 140 Tweet 88
  • More than 70,000 killed in Gaza since Israel offensive began, Hamas-run health ministry says

    351 shares
    Share 140 Tweet 88
  • Coronavirus: Daily update as No 10 row overshadows plans to lift lockdown

    356 shares
    Share 142 Tweet 89
  • Passengers face disruption as Airbus makes software updates to thousands of planes

    351 shares
    Share 140 Tweet 88

Features

Business

Covid fraud and error cost taxpayers £10.9bn, report will say

by admin
December 8, 2025
0

Josh MartinBusiness reporterGetty ImagesThe report will look at Covid-era programmes like Eat Out to Help Out, which subsidised hospitality...

Read more

FBI Director Kash Patel and Democrat Senator Cory Booker clash during hearing. #USNews #BBCNews

December 8, 2025

Production halted at Chinese factory making ‘childlike’ sex dolls

December 8, 2025

UK Championship 2025: Mark Selby holds off Judd Trump to win third title

December 8, 2025

Death of Venezuelan opposition figure in custody ‘vile’, US says

December 8, 2025

Recent News

  • Covid fraud and error cost taxpayers £10.9bn, report will say
  • FBI Director Kash Patel and Democrat Senator Cory Booker clash during hearing. #USNews #BBCNews
  • Production halted at Chinese factory making ‘childlike’ sex dolls
Tehuty News

Breaking news, sport, TV, radio and a whole lot more.
Tehuty News, educates and entertains - wherever you are, whatever your age.

Follow us on social media:

Category

  • Business
  • Have your say
  • In Pictures
  • Politics
  • Reel
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Top News
  • World
  •    If you re feeling guilty  there s probably a reason   Watch Love Life on iPlayer   LoveLife  bbciplayer  iplayer
  • When a series of disturbing incidents plagues an insular fishing community  a young man must wrestle with something entirely unexpected      Watch The Terror  Infamy on iPlayer from tonight at 9pm    TheTerrorInfamy  theterror  bbciplayer  iplayer  drama  horror  supernatural
  •  thebodycoach explores how his parents    mental health struggles shaped him in a new documentary  executive produced by  officiallouistheroux  Watch Joe Wicks  Facing My Childhood on iPlayer from 16 May  If you  or someone you know  has been affected by any of the issues in Joe Wicks  Facing My Childhood  the following organisations may be able to help  https   bbc in 3LPZ5xI   JoeWicksFacingMyChildhood  bbciplayer  iplayer  MentalHealth  JoeWicks  TheBodyCoach
  • Ten Dancers  One Iconic Stage     Who will be crowned BBC Young Dancer 2022   BBC Young Dancer  The Final  Saturday 7 May at 7pm  bbctwo  Series catch up on  bbciplayer   bbc  bbcarts  arts  dance  dancing  dancer  dancers  youngdancer  youngdancer2022  bbcyoungdancer2022
  • Election 2022  What does it all mean  Laura Kuenssberg and Chris Mason discuss  Newcast   Listen on BBC Sounds
  • Five home bakers compete in a national competition to create a pudding fit for the Queen  hoping to be crowned winner of the jubilee pudding           Watch The Jubilee Pudding  70 Years in the Baking on iPlayer from 12 May   bbc  bbciplayer  jubilee  platinumjubilee  royalfamily  thequeen  jubileepudding
  • The one and only Polly Gray  forever in our hearts and minds          Watch Peaky Blinders on iPlayer   PeakyBlinders  PollyGray  iPlayer  BBCiPlayer    Drama
  • Accurate depiction of dating in your thirties     Watch Gentleman Jack on iPlayer   GentlemanJack  bbciplayer  iplayer  dating
  • What s a jazz album you think people should check out         gregoryportermusic   palomafaith and  yolandabrown have each recommended a great jazz record for you to try

Recent News

Covid fraud and error cost taxpayers £10.9bn, report will say

December 8, 2025

FBI Director Kash Patel and Democrat Senator Cory Booker clash during hearing. #USNews #BBCNews

December 8, 2025
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • World
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Future
  • More

© 2020 Tehuty News

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Reel
  • Travel
  • WorkLife
  • Future
  • World
  • Technology
  • Login

© 2020 Tehuty News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In