Russian media crackdown worries journalists
Interview highlights government's own lack of success in Chechnya
![]() | Still photo taken from ABC broadcast of interview with Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev, conducted by Russian journalist, Andrei Babitsky. |
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"This is some kind of paranoia," said Oleg Panfilov, Director of the Center for Journalists in Extreme Situations in a telephone interview.
"To punish a network for airing an interview with a person that the Russian authorities have not managed to capture is evidently a form of revenge for their own lack of success." Russian television companies have no qualms about showing al-Qaida leaders Osama bin Laden, Abu Masab al-Zarqawi or other terrorists, he pointed out.
"They had to react somehow, and better to condemn its broadcasters than to discuss its content," Russian investigative journalist Julia Latynina wrote in her weekly column in the Moscow Times.
Contact with ABC now ‘undesirable’
The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement on its Web site, which was also read on state television by its deputy spokesman, Boris Malakhov, declaring Russia would not "renew accreditations of this televisions company's staff after they expire." Foreign journalists must have a Foreign Ministry accreditation to work legally in Russia.
The statement also said that in the interim all government agencies should view contact with ABC as "undesirable," accusing the network of "propagandizing terrorism."
The Ministry declined on Wednesday to add any further explanation or details to what amounts the first expulsion of a television channel in post-Soviet Russia.
Self-avowed terrorist
Basayev is considered an international terrorist by the United States, the United Nations, and has a $10 million bounty on his head.
In the interview, which aired on the ABC News program "Nightline" on July 28, Basayev attempted to justify his attacks. He said attacks such as the hostage taking at a school in Beslan last September that left more than 330 dead, including 186 children, was retribution for thousands of Chechen civilians killed at the hands of the Russian army. Chechnya began a war for independence from Russia over a decade ago.
ABC News President David Westin expressed sympathy for the suffering the Russians have experienced from Chechen terrorism, but defended the broadcast.
"No civilized people can condone the murder of innocent civilians. The mission of a free press is to cover news events, even those involving illegal acts, to help our audience better understand the important issues that confront us all," said Westin in a statement released by ABC.
Westin said ABC regretted the action taken by the Russian government, but said, "We cannot allow any government to deter us from reporting the news fully and accurately.”
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