
Journalist, editor. Slavic philologist (KazNPU, 2007), media trainer, media literacy teacher. From 2017 to 2022, editor-in-chief of the Fact Check in Kazakhstan project. Co-author, compiler and editor of a number of works on journalism and hate speech, as well as a textbook and methodological guide on media literacy for secondary schools in Kazakhstan. Editor of the methodological section “Checked”.


Drone show in China, tea in the USA, hacking in Ukraine: we analyze posts about congratulations to Putin on his birthday

Is it true that there are such posters with Putin in the Gaza Strip?

Is it true that most crimes in Russia are committed by migrants?

Did the head of the Pentagon ask the Russian military not to organize a “hunt” for the Abrams?

Is it true that a restaurant in Kyiv offers its visitors kebab with “Karabakh smoke”?

Is it true that the continents of North and South America have been renamed on contour maps for Russian schoolchildren?

Did Guy de Maupassant say: “All diseases come from nerves, and only syphilis from pleasure”?

Is it true that posters with the slogan “Children, kitchen, church” appeared in the occupied part of the Kherson region?

Is it true that Joe Biden got lost in the Capitol?

Is it true that a French travel agency disclosed information about 500,000 dead Ukrainian soldiers?






