
Pro-Russian activists remove the Ukrainian flag (center) to replace it with a Russian one on an administration office in the center of Donetsk, Ukraine, on March 1, 2014. Supporters of new Ukrainian authorities and pro-Russia demonstrators clashed in Kharkiv and Donetsk, a mostly Russian-speaking region in eastern Ukraine.
Roskomnadzor said in a statement published online Monday that it had been ordered by the general prosecutor's office to shut down the pages on Russia's leading social media website, VKontakte. The agency said the groups "propagandized the activity of Ukrainian nationalist groups," and accused them of encouraging "terrorist activity" and "participation in unsanctioned mass actions."
The largest pro-demonstration group, which has more than 500,000 members, was not accessible to users on Russian territory on Monday.
While much of Russian media is state-controlled, the Internet has so far remained largely free from censorship and has provided an active forum for anti-government criticism.
Source: The Associated Press





Comment: According to a March 2nd article from the Moscow Times, it is 4 websites that have been blocked.