Nadya Tolokonnikova, founder of radical feminist punk rock band Pussy Riot, has teased a new video in which she says she’ll turn Putin ‘into ashes’ as she shares details of her dominatrix work

Source: Dailystar.co.uk.

Nadya Tolokonnikova, Pussy Riot leader, says she wants to turn Russian leader Vladimir Putin “into ashes” after sharing details of becoming an OnlyFans dominatrix.

See moer photo’s on: Dailystar.co.uk

Pussy Riot’s brand of feminist punk rock has criticised many aspects of Russian society – and in particular the president.

An official statement from Pussy Riot in 2014 said that Nadya had left the group – but she still appeared with them later that same year, when the band was were attacked with whips and pepper spray by security staff at the Winter Olympics in Sochi.

The group reached world fame when they staged a performance in a Moscow cathedral in February, 2012 and three members of the band were jailed.

en years later, Pussy Riot’s rebellious spirit remains undimmed. The band raised over $7million in Bitcoin to support relief efforts in Ukraine, and several members of the 11-strong collective have chosen to take ownership of their sexual identities by launching OnlyFans pages.

Nadya says that she finds sex work “empowering”.

“It did empower me. I was pleasantly surprised by people who subscribed to my page,” she told Alt Press. “It turned into this really interesting exercise for me as a feminist to eventually explore my own boundaries and the boundaries of other people.

She added: “I exist on an OnlyFans page in the role of the dominatrix because, first of all, it’s fun. It serves historical purposes because women have been oppressed for far too long, and I think a figure of dominatrix lets a lot of people who engage with me imagine women in a different role than they were historically taught.”https://get-latest.convrse.media/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dailystar.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fworld-news%2Fpussy-riot-bandleader-turned-onlyfans-28699320&cre=center&cip=19&view=web

She says that it’s fascinating to explore her own sexual kinks and how her feminism interacts with – and sometimes challenges those kinks.

But she’s also interested in challenging other people’s prejudices and sexual identities.

“I would ask a person who works in law enforcement to do certain actions…to do certain actions with his body, to get out in the city and cross-dress,” she says.

But she wants to do a lot more than challenge Russian leader Putin.