2000
H.E. Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin
President
The Kremlin
Moscow
Russia
Via Fax: + 70 95 206 91 11/206 41 68
Vienna, 18 December 2000
Your Excellency,
The International Press Institute (IPI), the global network of editors and media
executives, strongly condemns the assault on an investigative reporter in
Moscow.
According to our sources, Oleg Luriye, a journalist with the newspaper Novaia
Gazeta, was attacked by unknown assailants early in the morning on 17 December.
Luriye and his wife were about to park their car when five persons approached
them. The attackers locked Luriye’s wife in the car and started beating him.
Luriye believes the assault was directly connected to his work since he was not
robbed of any valuables even though he offered to hand over money and his mobile
phone. Prior to the attack, the journalist had been investigating the recently
closed Mabetex case, in which a Swiss company had allegedly bribed senior
members of the Yeltsin government. This incident is the latest of a series of
disturbing threats and assaults directed at the journalists of Novaia Gazeta.
On 12 May, Igor Domnekov, another journalist with Novaia Gazeta, was attacked in
front of the entrance to his apartment building. Suffering from severe head
injuries, the journalist never regained consciousness and died on 16 July as a
result of his injuries. It is believed that his attackers mistook him for
another investigative reporter for Novaia Gazeta, Oleg Sultanov, who lives in
the same building.
Sultanov says that he has been subject to threats from the Federal Security
Service for his reporting. Novaia Gazeta has published numerous articles on
corruption, implicating people in the security services. Sultanov is now being
protected by bodyguards. Aside from its investigative reporting into corruption,
Novaia Gazeta has on several occasions criticised the actions of Russian forces
in Chechnya.
On 27 April, the magazine received a warning from the Ministry of Information
for publishing an interview with Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov. Furthermore,
an editor-in-chief of a local branch of Novaia Gazeta, Yevgeny Rukin, was
arrested at the beginning of the year for "abuse of authority".
It is IPI’s belief that these incidents are directly related to the reporting
undertaken by Novaia Gazeta and its journalists and thus outright violations of
everyone's right to "seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any
media and regardless of frontiers" as guaranteed by Article 19 of the United
Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
In addition, physical harassment and other measures of intimidation foster a
climate in which journalists are more readily inclined to practice
self-censorship in order to escape retribution for their reporting. This is
detrimental to the free flow of ideas and to any democratic society.
In the light of these worrying developments, we urge Your Excellency to do
everything in your power to ensure the safety of journalists working in Russia.
Moreover, we urge you to ensure that there is a thorough investigation into the
assault on Luriye and the other attacks and threats against Nova Gazeta
reporters and that those responsible are brought swiftly to justice.
We thank you for your attention.
Yours sincerely,
Johann P. Fritz
Director