He Is Not Dimon to You | |
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Narrated by | Alexei Navalny |
Music by | "American Boy" by Kombinaciya |
Distributed by | Anti-Corruption Foundation |
Release date |
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Running time | 49.6 minutes |
Country | Russia |
Languages | Russian (with official Russian, English, French, Spanish, Polish and Finnish subtitles) |
External videos | |
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He Is Not Dimon to You or Don't Call Him Dimon (Russian: Он вам не Димон, romanized: On vam ne Dimon) is a 2017 Russian documentary film detailing alleged corruption by Dmitry Medvedev who was Prime Minister of Russia at the time of release. The film estimates that $1.2 billion was embezzled by Dmitry Medvedev.
The name of the film is a reference to an interview with Medvedev's press secretary Natalya Timakova, where she criticized the use of the nickname Dimon when speaking about Medvedev on social media.[1] Dimon is a colloquial form of the name Dmitry, often used in gangster circles.[citation needed]
The film is divided into 10 chapters:
All chapters are published on the FBK web page.[2]
He Is Not Dimon to You was posted on the YouTube channel on 2 March 2017. The video received about 1.5 million views in its first day. A week after, this surged to 7 million, exceeding the result of Chaika, another film by Alexei Navalny and the Anti-Corruption Foundation. In two weeks, the video had received over 13 million views. A month after release, the video had over 17 million views.[3] By May 2019, the video reached 30 million views.[4]
Russian state-owned media and most of privately held media have completely ignored the controversial revelations.[5] Initially there was no reaction from Dmitry Medvedev or other high-ranking Russian government officials.[6] On March 10, Medvedev blocked Alexei Navalny on Instagram. Navalny led country-wide street protests on March 26, with a stated goal of forcing Putin and Medvedev to respond to Navalny's accusations. Following the end of March protest action, Medvedev claimed that the movie was shot specifically as an excuse for it, while accusations of corruption were 'made up on compote principle from weird stuff, nonsense and some pieces of paper'.[7]
According to Stephen Sestanovich, Navalny "has forced the president of Russia to stop pretending that he is against corruption. Others may rail against it, but for Putin, corruption is now officially 'fake news.'"[8]
An April 2017 Levada poll found that 45% of surveyed Russians support the resignation of Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev,[9] while 33% of respondents were against. Newsweek reported that "An opinion poll by the Moscow-based Levada Center indicated that 67 percent held Putin personally responsible for high-level corruption".[10]
On 31 May 2017, Navalny lost a defamation suit over the documentary, filed by Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov. A judge at Moscow's Lyublinsky district court ordered Navalny to remove his YouTube video and to publish a retraction, which Navalny stated he will not do.[11]
In a trial which lasted two days, the judge dismissed nearly all of the motions that Navalny had filed, including summoning Medvedev to testify. She did not allow any witnesses to appear in front of the court or review the documents that the investigation was based on.[citation needed] Navalny said that the verdict in Usmanov's favor should bring even more people to the streets at upcoming protests.[12]
The film was covered by many news organisations from across the world, including RBC,[13] Novaya Gazeta,[14] and Vedomosti[15] in Russia. The New York Times,[16] the Associated Press,[17] Bloomberg L.P.,[18] and The Rachel Maddow Show in the United States.[19] The Daily Telegraph,[20] Sky News,[21] Deutsche Welle,[22] NRC Handelsblad,[23] de Volkskrant,[24] Helsingin Sanomat,[25] Delfi,[26] Diena,[27] Kas Jauns,[28] Latvijas Avīze,[29] Neatkarīgā Rīta Avīze,[30] TV3 Latvia,[31] Delfi,[32] Ru.Delfi,[33] Lietuvos žinios,[34] and TV3 Lithuania[35] in Europe.