Tatyana Felgenhauer | |
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Born |
Tatyana Vladimirovna Felgenhauer 6 January 1985 Tashkent |
Occupation | journalist |
Tatyana Vladimirovna Felgenhauer (Russian: Татья́на Влади́мировна Фельгенга́уэр; IPA: [fʲɪlʲɡʲɪnˈɡaʊɨr]; born January 6, 1985) is a Russian journalist, correspondent and presenter of Echo of Moscow radio station, and its deputy editor-in-chief.
She received the Moscow Prize in the field of journalism in 2010 (along with ).
The participant of the protest actions against the falsification of the elections in Bolotnaya Square and Sakharov Avenue, covered the events on the air of the radio station.
On October 23, 2017, a man with a knife forced his entry into the building of the Echo of Moscow radio station and wounded Felgenhauer in the neck. Russian authorities named the attacker as Boris Grits, a 48-year-old with dual Russian and Israeli citizenship. A report on Russian state television during the month accused the radio station, and Felgenhauer directly, of working to benefit foreign interests in Russia. However, early evidence suggests the attacker's motive was personal rather than political. Police are treating the attack as attempted murder.
Born with the surname Shadrina, the military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer is her stepfather.
She is divorced and has no children.