Violence against journalists intensifies in Russia
01-02-2021
The Russian Journalists’ and Media Workers’ Union (JMWU) and the Russian Union of Journalists (RUJ) recorded on 31 January at least 120 cases of detention, obstruction and violence against journalists while covering protests in support of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny, in Russia. The European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) calls on the Russian authorities to stop intimidating journalists and no longer prevent them from doing their job.
On Sunday, tens of thousands took to the streets across Russia to show support for the jailed opposition leader Aleksei Navalny. By late Sunday evening, more than 5,000 people had been detained in at least 85 cities across Russia, according to OVD Info, an independent NGO that monitors rallies.
Journalists were detained, obstructed or intimidated in at least 32 cities, including Moscow, St. Petersburg, Samara, Tyumen, Khabarovsk, Ulan-Ude…
According to JMWU-OVD Info monitoring, at least 120 journalists were detained, obstructed or beaten, while covering the protests. Law enforcement agents detained journalists from major Russian and international media (Kommersant, Radio Svoboda, Novaya Gazeta, RBK, Ekho Moskvy) and from small or regional media (Baza, Open Media, Kholod, MBKh Media , Sota.Vision, RusNews, Activatica, Karavan, the Shtab channel, Navalny LIVE, Rabochaya Democracy, Reporter-NN, Yakutia.Info, Udm-info…).
According to RUJ, the editor-in-chief of Batayskoe Vremya was condemned to 10 days of arrest in Rostov; a journalist for DonDay was detained and fined in Rostov; a photoreporter was arrested in Murmansk; several journalists, including the editor-in-chief of Babr.Media Andrei Temnov and the editor-in-chief of Yakutia.Info Denis Adamov, were detained in Irkutsk and Krasnoyarsk; Sergei Smirnov, editor-in-chief of Mediazona, was detained in Moscow; journalist Nikolai Svanidze was also detained in Moscow…
“Overall, we saw twice as many violations of media freedom this Sunday as the previous weekend. The repression is intensifying, even if the acts of violence remain limited,” commented the EFJ General Secretary Ricardo Gutiérrez. “The journalists covering these demonstrations were clearly identified. We call on the Russian authorities to protect these journalists rather than intimidate or prevent them from working.”
More pictures from Ivan Petrov (Tardigrada): http://ivanphoto-spb.tilda.ws/
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