#21 - JRL 2007 - 210 - JRL Home
Russia: RFE/RL Conference Marks Anniversary Of
Politkovskaya Murder
By Brian Whitmore and Claire Bigg
Copyright (c) 2005. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
PRAGUE, October 4, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Friends and colleagues of slain Russian
investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya gathered at RFE/RL's Prague
headquarters today to honor her memory through personal remembrances and
discussions of the struggle for press freedom in Russia.
In addition to today's conference in Prague, ceremonies and vigils marking
Politkovskaya's assassination also are scheduled to be held in Moscow, New York,
Washington, Stockholm, Hamburg, Paris, and London.
Speaking via video link from Moscow, Dmitry Muratov, Politkovskaya's editor
in chief at her newspaper, "Novaya gazeta," recited the telephone number that so
many people had dialed to convey the truth about Russia's war in Chechnya and
other issues that received little or no coverage in the country's mainstream
press.
"798-1034. This telephone number stopped answering on October 7 last year,"
Muratov said in an emotional speech. "Hundreds of people called this number. On
this number, she heard numerous curses and threats. She heard many expressions
of gratitude. On this number, people called her to set up meetings during which
she was given extremely important information on corruption in the Russian
Federation."
Muratov said "Novaya gazeta" will reactivate Politkovskaya's old mobile
telephone on October 8 in hopes of reviving the stream of calls ended by an
assassin's bullets one year ago. Once again, Muratov said, Russians will be able
to call with their pain, grief, gratitude, and information about official
malfeasance -- and get a sympathetic ear from Politkovskaya's former colleagues.
Murdered In Her Apartment Building
Politkovskaya was shot dead on October 7, 2006, as she stepped into the
elevator of her Moscow apartment building. She was hit with three bullets in the
chest and one in the head. She was 48. No one has yet been convicted in her
murder. Muratov accused Russia's security services of participating in
Politkovskaya's assassination and sabotaging the current criminal investigation.
"She was a person who did not place any luminary or authority above justice.
She was absolutely undiscriminating in her choice of enemies," Muratov said,
"Now let them be afraid. They, the corrupt officers of Russia's security
services, are seeking to ruin the investigation that is being carried out by the
Russian Prosecutor-General's Office and 'Novaya gazeta.' I can tell you that
special services officers and Interior Ministry officials aided, participated
in, and organized Anna's murder."
After a year of apparent inaction, Russian Prosecutor-General Yury Chaika
announced in August that the murder was carried out by a Moscow-based gang led
by an ethnic Chechen. He said 10 people had been arrested, including a member of
the Federal Security Service and several former and active police officers.
Within days, however, two of the suspects were released. Russia media reports
cast doubt on the involvement of two other detainees.
Yelena Rykovtseva, who hosts a daily news program on RFE/RL's Russian
Service, was the last journalist to interview Politkovskaya.
"I remember this moment one year ago when I was told that Anna had been
murdered," Rykovtseva said. "I was horrified. Not only because the person I have
known for 10 years was dead, but especially because I felt that I could be
indirectly responsible for that. Just two days before the tragedy Anna was in my
broadcast, saying very critical things about [current Chechen President] Ramzan
Kadyrov. This could have been the last straw that was followed by revenge."
Death Met With Indifference In Russia
On the day she was killed, Politkovskaya was due to file an article exposing
cases of torture by members of the "Kadyrovtsy," Kadyrov's personal militia,
which is notorious for its brutal practices. Rykovtseva added that the
outpouring of grief that her death sparked across the globe contrasted sharply
with the indifference her death met in her homeland. Most Russians, she says,
still don't understand what they have lost.
"People in Russia value freedom of speech much less than people in other
countries," Rykovtseva said. "That's the reason why Anna's job was not that
appreciated in Russia. That's why you don't hear people protesting against the
shameful censorship on Russian television channels. Russian society doesn't seem
to have even understood what they lost with Anna. They have lost their only
chance to learn the truth about Chechnya."
Kevin Klose, a former RFE/RL president and the current head of National
Public Radio in the United States, says Politkovskaya has become, through her
slaying, the face of the Chechen conflict for Westerners who find the brutal
conflict perplexing.
"I think the entire sequence of the Chechnya conflict is very confusing in
the West," Klose said. "But when you have a single moment, like the killing of a
single individual who has borne witness to that, people see it as a kind of
martyrdom issue. It starts to attract their attention on a very personal and
specific level."
Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek called for intensified international
pressure on the Russian government to uphold the rule of law and freedom of
expression. "It is important for Russian authorities to investigate her murder
to the fullest extent," adding that "the outcome of the investigation of the
murder of Anna Politkovskaya will attest to the current situation in Russia."
Growing Repression
Many observers have called Politkovskaya's death a turning point in Putin's
Russia, heralding a new era of repression and fear. But Edward Lucas, deputy
editor of the international section of the British weekly magazine "The
Economist," says Politkovskaya's killing was part of a larger pattern of growing
repression that started almost immediately after the Soviet collapse and picked
up pace under Putin.
"Anna's murder was a symptom of a process that probably started, in a way,
back in 1991 when they failed to liquidate the KGB," said Lucas, who covered
Putin's rise and early years in the Kremlin as "The Economist's" Moscow bureau
chief. "It accelerated more when Putin took over and when he consolidated power,
and more after Beslan [hostage tragedy]. It's, I would say, still accelerating."
Many participants agreed that Politkovskaya's work had helped expose that
process of mounting repression in modern-day Russia. Few, however, were
optimistic that either her work or her untimely death would be able to reverse
Russia's current course -- or that there is anyone left in the country who is
able to rise to the challenge of following in her footsteps.
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