The Kremlin on Friday denied that President Vladimir Putin is being shielded from bad news, after a celebrity influencer accused top officials of failing to tell him the truth about Russia’s problems.
“No. It is not so,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, dismissing the claim. “Putin is the head of state he deals with the widest range of issues on the agenda.”
A DIRECT APPEAL THAT RESONATED
The controversy was triggered by Viktoria Bonya, a reality TV personality turned influencer, whose emotional video quickly went viral, drawing more than 20 million views and widespread engagement.
In a direct appeal to the Russian president, Bonya framed her criticism around a culture of fear and silence. “Vladimir Vladimirovich, people are afraid of you,” she said. “The public is afraid of you, bloggers, artists are afraid of you, governors are afraid of you In my view, we shouldn’t fear you.”
The tone — rare in Russia’s tightly controlled public discourse — helped propel the video across platforms. Bonya, who has previously supported Putin, said the real danger was not dissent but disconnection.
“The most frightening thing,” she added, “is that you do not know what is going on in the country. You are not being given accurate information.”
A LIST OF PROBLEMS — AND A WARNING
In her video, Bonya outlined five issues she claimed officials were reluctant to raise: flooding in Dagestan, environmental damage from an oil spill in Anapa, controversial wildlife policies, livestock seizures in the Novosibirsk region, and internet restrictions affecting businesses.
She said ordinary Russians were “suffering greatly” and warned that mounting pressure could eventually erupt.
“People are being compressed like a spring — and one day that spring will snap,” she said. The message blended criticism with caution, stopping short of outright opposition but clearly challenging how information flows to the top.
AN UNUSUAL KREMLIN ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
In a rare move, the Kremlin did not ignore the criticism. A day before Peskov’s denial, officials acknowledged Bonya’s concerns and said steps were already being taken to address some of the issues she raised — an uncommon public response to a social media critique.
The reaction appeared to have an immediate effect.
In a follow-up video, Bonya broke down in tears, thanking the Kremlin for paying attention and saying she stood “with the Russian people.”
Bonya’s position is notable. She is not an opposition figure and has previously backed Putin, including his stance on Ukraine.
But her video reflects a growing pattern where even pro-government voices are expressing unease over economic pressure, regional crises and restrictions on public expression.
She also pointed to the impact of internet controls and social media limits, saying they have hurt entrepreneurs and pushed some Russians to leave the country.
A CLASH BETWEEN CONTROL AND VIRALITY
The episode underscores a broader tension in Russia’s information landscape.
While official messaging remains tightly managed, platforms like Instagram are harder to contain — especially when criticism comes from within, rather than from traditional opposition figures.
The Kremlin’s insistence that Putin is fully informed stands in contrast to Bonya’s claim that officials are filtering reality.
The truth may be harder to verify. But the scale of engagement — millions of views, comments and shares — suggests her message resonated beyond celebrity influence.
At its core, the episode raises a familiar question in centralized systems: how much unfiltered information reaches the top?
For now, the Kremlin’s answer is unequivocal — Putin knows.
– Ends
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