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#19 - JRL 2007-28 - JRL Home
Press Group Calls Putin A 'Democratator'
Copyright (c) 2007. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
February 5, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- The Committee To Protect Journalists (CPJ) says
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez represent
a new model of government control of the press.
In a new report, the U.S.-based media freedom advocacy group calls Putin and
Chavez "democratators" -- popularly elected autocrats.
It says the two leaders have created legal frameworks in their countries to
control, intimidate, and censor the news media.
The report notes that 13 journalists have been murdered in Russia since Putin
took power in 2000.
CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon told RFE/RL that during a recent visit to
Russia, he had discussed the journalists' deaths with government
representatives.
"In one of those meetings with the Foreign Ministry, we discussed Russia's
terrible record of impunity," Simon said. "Thirteen journalists have been
murdered in Russia since [President Vladimir] Putin came to power. None of those
cases have been adequately investigated."
Simon said there appears to be "some progress," however, in that some of the
cases are being prosecuted. And he noted that Putin last week acknowledged for
the first time the vital role that journalists play in Russia.
In its report, the CPJ also says 55 journalists were killed in 2006 while
doing their jobs, including 32 covering the Iraq war, most of them Iraqis.
The report also accuses Iranian authorities of taking a "revolving-door
approach" to restricting journalists by imprisoning reporters for short periods
of time and releasing them before an international outcry can develop.
(with material from agency reports).
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