#38 - JRL 2008-37 - JRL Home
Moscow Times
February 21, 2008
Journalist In Trouble For Piece On Putin
By Svetlana Osadchuk
Staff Writer
[cf:
www.uralpolit.ru/urfo/socium/incident/id_87469.html re: Averkiyev's summons
and
"Putin: Our Good Hitler," by Igor Averkiyev, Za cheloveka No. 5 (December 2007)
http://www.prpc.ru/averkiev/071210.shtml]
A Perm journalist has been questioned by local prosecutors and may face
criminal charges after he penned an article identifying what he characterized as
positive similarities between President Vladimir Putin and Adolf Hitler.
Igor Averkiyev, 47, editor of the newspaper Lichnoye Delo, was summoned to
the city's Leninsky District Prosecutor's Office on Monday to answer questions
about an article called "Putin Is Our Good Hitler," published in the newspaper
Za Cheloveka in December.
The story compares the eight years of Putin's rule to the early years of
Hitler's rule in Nazi Germany.
Prosecutors opened an investigation after receiving a complaint from the
Federal Service for Mass Media, Telecommunications and the Protection of
Cultural Heritage. The service charged that the story contravened laws in place
to battle extremism and demanded that Averkiyev and Sergei Isayev, the publisher
of Za Cheloveka, be charged.
The Perm office of the federal body responsible for monitoring compliance
with mass media legislation said it found evidence of calls "to change the
present constitutional order" in the story.
Perm Prosecutor's Office spokeswoman Tatyana Shuvayeva said Averkiyev had
only been called in for preliminary questioning and declined to answer any
questions about the case until experts had more opportunity to examine the
article.
Averkiyev wrote that "like Hitler, Putin is the savior of the Fatherland, the
guardian of greatness, stability and order," who also "safeguards the country
from enemies, both foreign and domestic."
During the campaign leading up to December's State Duma elections, Averkiyev
claimed, Putin "tried on the mantle of 'national leader,' thus practically
making a claim to absolute power in Russia, unlimited by elections, parliaments
or constitutions -- limited only by the leader's personal ambition and the
people's for him."
Reached by telephone Wednesday, Averkiyev had no immediate comment on the
case.
Averkiyev is not the first journalist to face prosecution for what were
considered insulting portrayals of Putin.
Charges of inciting extremism by Saratov authorities against Sergei Mikhailov,
whose newspaper, The Saratov Reporter, published a photo portraying Putin as
popular fictional spy Otto von Stirlitz, were only dropped last week.
Ivanovo journalist Vladimir Rakhmankov was convicted in October of publicly
insulting a public official and fined 20,000 rubles ($750) for referring to
Putin as "a phallic symbol."
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