Moscow targets a 17-year-old researcher for alleging a ruble-pegged stablecoin circumvents sanctions to fund the Ukraine conflict.
Russia imposed sanctions on a British teenager for publishing a report linking the A7A5 stablecoin to funding the war in Ukraine. The ruble-pegged digital asset was allegedly designed to bypass Western sanctions imposed after Russia’s 2022 invasion.
The Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed the allegations as “defamatory speculations.” The report, authored by 17-year-old Alexander Browder for a UK think tank, also led to sanctions against three other UK nationals and a Washington Post journalist. Browder, son of Kremlin critic Bill Browder, called the move a “badge of honour.”
The A7A5 stablecoin emerged as a tool to evade financial restrictions, raising concerns over cryptocurrency’s role in geopolitical conflicts. No immediate market reaction was reported.