USA TODAY International Edition

I cheered when a Russian hero stood up to Putin on live TV

- Tim Swarens Tim Swarens is deputy opinion editor for USA TODAY.

Remember the name Marina Ovsyanniko­va. She is a hero. She also is a Russian.

On Monday, Ovsyanniko­va stood up to Vladimir Putin, the murderous dictator who terrorizes protesters, dissidents, journalist­s and anyone else inside Russia who dares to question his barbaric regime.

‘ Don’t believe the propaganda. They’re lying to you here’

And she did it on live TV. Inside Russia. During the nightly newscast, Ovsyanniko­va, an editor at the government- controlled Russian Channel One, rushed onto the set to proclaim: “Stop the war. No to war!”

Standing behind the TV anchor, who continued to spout propaganda during the protest, Ovsyanniko­va held up a sign that said in Russian: “Don’t believe the propaganda. They’re lying to you here.” In English it said: “No war ... Russians against war.”

Her now former employer cut away from the protest, and Ovsyanniko­va reportedly has been arrested. But not before she shared with her fellow citizens something desperatel­y in short supply in Russia: the truth.

In a video posted on social media, Ovsyanniko­va said she is ashamed of spreading “Kremlin propaganda” while working at Channel One. “We were silent in 2014 when this was just beginning,” she said in the video. “We did not go out to protest when the Kremlin poisoned ( opposition leader Alexei) Navalny. We are just silently watching this anti- human regime. And now the whole world has turned away from us and the next 10 generation­s won’t be able to clean themselves from the shame of this fratricida­l war.

“What is happening in Ukraine is a crime and Russia is the aggressor. The responsibi­lity of this aggression lies on the shoulders of only one person: Vladimir Putin.”

She ended the video with a call for her fellow Russians to take to the streets: “Only we have the power to stop all this madness. Go to the protests. Don’t be afraid of anything. They can’t imprison us all.”

Russia arrests thousands of protesters

Ovsyanniko­va isn’t the first ordinary Russian to rise against Putin. Thousands of protesters have been arrested since the war began.

For years, dissidents such as Navalny, now trapped in a penal colony far from Moscow, have risked their freedom and their lives to object to Putin’s butchery. And journalist­s such as Ovsyanniko­va have long been frequent targets of Putin’s thugs.

The world’s rush to rally around Ukrainians’ fight for freedom has been one of the few bright lights as Europe retreats into its dark past of war and oppression. But Russian citizens far from the halls of power also have been targeted for reprisals.

In Canada, for instance, Russian pianist Alexander Malofeev’s concerts were canceled, even though the 20year- old virtuoso had posted on Facebook that “every Russian will feel guilty for decades because of the terrible and bloody decision that none of us could influence and predict.” He’s not the only artist punished because of Putin.

And so, I’ll say again: Remember Marina Ovsyanniko­va.

She spoke truth to a power that can lock her away, kill her, erase all mention of her inside her homeland – and she did so precisely because she is a Russian who loves her country.

So, by all means, cancel Vladimir Putin. Cancel the corrupt oligarchs who have enabled his reign of terror.

But don’t cancel the Russian people. They have the power, as Marina Ovsyanniko­va bravely said, to “stop all this madness.”

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