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In Russia, a Courageous Voice Is Silenced

By Katrina vanden Heuvel, TheNation.com. Posted October 12, 2006.


Anna Politkavskaya's murder may mark the beginning of the end for the free press under Putin.

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Russia and the world have lost a great and courageous journalist. The killing of Anna Politkovskaya on October 7 is horrifying and shocking, but not unexpected. As Oleg Panfilov, who runs Moscow's Center for Journalism in Extreme Situations, said upon learning of her murder, "There are journalists who have this fate hanging over them. I always thought something would happen to Anya, first of all because of Chechnya." It was "a savage crime," said former Russian President -- and the father of glasnost -- Mikhail Gorbachev. "It is a blow to the entire democratic, independent press. It is a grave crime against the country, against all of us."

Politkovskaya was just 48 years old when she was found in her apartment building, shot in the head with a pistol. In the last decade, her unflinching reporting on the brutality and corruption of the Chechen war made her one of the bravest of Russia's journalists.

The numerous death threats she had received in these last few years never slowed her. In fact, when she was killed Politkovskaya was at work finishing an article -- to have been published Monday -- about torturers in the government of the pro-Kremlin Premier of Chechnya.

Politkavskaya was a fearless chronicler of the mass executions, the torture, the rape and kidnappings of Chechen civilians at the hands of Russian troops and security forces. She understood the cancer that was the war -- and wrote and spoke of how the "Bush-Blair war on terror" had given Putin allowance to say he was fighting international terrorism. In fact, the Kremlin's policies and the brutal Russian occupation of Chechnya, she wrote in many dispatches, were instead engendering the terrorists they were supposed to eliminate.

Her raw and searing reports on the human catastrophe of the Chechen war appeared primarily in Novaya Gazeta, which has become in these last five years the main opposition newspaper in Russia. It is to Novaya's credit that her crusading investigative articles were published inside Russia. In the wake of her death, there is concern that the next victim may be her newspaper. That's why it's important that the international journalistic community defend the weekly newspaper's independent, dissenting voice. (In a little-noted development, last june Gorbachev became a minority partner/shareholder in Novaya. His role may provide some protection from any kremlin attempts to curb the paper's voice.)

I met Politkovskaya a few times -- in Moscow and in New York, including at a Committee to Protect Journalist's dinner in New York where she received one of the many honors that came her way in these last years.. she spoke with fierce intensity about the horror of the war -- and the injustice and corruption she believed was strangling Russia. There was a bluntness to her personal style -- as there was to her investigative reporting. A mother of two, Politkovskaya spoke of her fear, and the risks she knew she faced in taking on the most powerful forces in Russia. But she never let that interfere with what she believed passionately was her duty as a journalist. In an interview two years ago with the BBC, Politkovskaya said "I am absolutely sure that risk is [a] usual part of my job; job of [a] Russian journalist, and I cannot stop because it's my duty. I think the duty of doctors is to give health to their patients, the duty of the singer is to sing. The duty of [the] journalist [is] to write what this journalist sees is the reality. It's my one duty."

Her latest book, Putin's Russia -- an uncompromising indictment of her beloved country's corrupt politics -- has just been published in the U.S. Read it. But it is her reporting on Russia's long-running brutal war -- collected in a previous book, A Small Corner of Hell: Dispatches from Chechnya, -- which best explains what her friend Panfilov said on Saturday: "Whenever the question arose whether there is honest journalism in Russia, the first name that came to mind was Politkovskaya." And may it be remembered that this brave and honest journalist never compromised on the fundamental ideals of free speech and a free press in the long battle for human rights in Russia.

Since 1992, forty-two journalists in Russia have been killed -- most in unsolved contract executions. Journalists -- and citizens of all countries who value the importance of a free press -- should join in calling on the Russian government to conduct an immediate and thorough investigation in order to find, prosecute and bring to justice those responsible for Anna Politkovskaya's murder -- and those of her colleagues.

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See more stories tagged with: journalism, russia

Katrina vanden Heuvel is editor of The Nation.

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View:
sad
Posted by: rsaxto on Oct 12, 2006 1:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is a sad state of affairs when the two most powerful owners of weapons of mass destruction are both guilty of murder and torture. Weapons of mass destruction corrupt as grossly as they kill. Big booming power = massive corruption in every nation that has them. We cannot survive without general and complete disarmament of all weapons of mass destruction. North Korea should not have them and neither should anyone else.

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» Bowling for Bush Posted by: edith
what is sadder yet,
Posted by: wawa on Oct 12, 2006 5:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What Politkovskaya really did was do the JOB that ALL journalists are supposed to do:

SEEK and REPORT THE TRUTH.

Politkovskaya had INTEGRITY and a PASSION for truth.

Politkovskaya is dead but her spirit for REPORTING the TRUTH can never be silenced by a gun-

Muckrakers with Integrity and a Passion for The Truth
Will always RISE UP/Intifada and carry that torch.

-Eileen Fleming,
Investigative Journalist returning to the Occupied Palestinian Territories November 2006:
Will be Reporting on WAWA BLOG and Opednews.

Some recent articles @
http://www.opednews.com/author/author1112.html

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Uh, excuse me but the liberal writers took this long to figure it out
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 12, 2006 10:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps the author should've picked up the pieces from this article a long time back:

http://www.moderateindependent.com/v4i3russia.htm

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Putin Has Bushes Admiration Again
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 12, 2006 3:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
GW Bush reportedly told Pakistan's leaders that they should simply make protesters "disappear." The Pakistanis were apalled. Only a few paragraphs of the US Constitution now stand between Bush and what happens in Russia. In fact, no doubt, what happened in Russia is something Bush admires.

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Well...
Posted by: han on Oct 13, 2006 7:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The journalists that are reporting in Iraq are getting targetted on a regular basis, often with legal endings. And it also happens to reporters who get to cose to the 9/11 truth in their own land. Nice we get to read about how the Russians do it but in the meanwhile the Americans are the real bullies.

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Courage & convictions
Posted by: Smiggsy on Oct 15, 2006 1:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am posting on this article to honour an unknown russian patriot who, in all common sense, should never have died in the above circumstances. Maybe it was simple passion for her job as a good hack, and not as a subversist, that was Anna Politkavskaya's undoing. We may never know.

Aside from that; I am appalled & disgusted, and not surprised that these events have unfolded in Russia. How many reporters anywhere are targeted for their actions. It is the laws of society itself which are partial to these types of obvious crimes.

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center
Posted by: johny on Dec 26, 2006 12:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
center
Posted by: johny on Dec 26, 2006 12:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]