#10 - JRL 2008-88 - JRL Home
Moscow Times
May 6, 2008
Some Foreign Media Offered Kremlin Trips
The Kremlin is planning to give foreign news agencies greater access in
covering the new president, Dmitry Medvedev, a Kremlin spokesman said Monday.
Under the plan, reporters representing foreign news wires such as The
Associated Press and Reuters will be allowed the same travel opportunities as
their Russian counterparts, but they will have to be Russian citizens, spokesman
Dmitry Peskov said.
Peskov did not elaborate on why Russian citizenship is required, saying only
that the condition was a result of "infrastructure restrictions."
Journalists from foreign newswires have been prohibited from accompanying
President Vladimir Putin on his foreign and domestic trips as part of the
Kremlin pool, Peskov said. Instead, they traveled separately, he said.
"Foreign newswires will actually become permanent and full members of the
Kremlin pool," Peskov said.
He declined to name an exact date for when the new rules would take effect,
but said it would happen in the near future.
Doug Birch, AP's Moscow bureau chief, confirmed that the Kremlin had offered
AP a chance to send a reporter on the president's Kremlin pool plane.
"We're not certain exactly what this will mean, but we hope it will give us
improved access to officials and briefings," he said via e-mail.
The AP has two Russian citizens on its core reporting staff, but Birch said
things would be easier for the bureau in terms of scheduling if foreign
reporters could fly on the pool plane too.
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