The Phnom Penh Post

Ukraine under pressure after fake murder

- Ania Tsoukanova and Oleksandr Savochenko

UKRAINE was under fire on Thursday after it admitted staging the murder of anti-Kremlin journalist Arkady Babchenko, despite relief in Russia and Ukraine that he was alive.

Babchenko made a shock reappearan­ce at a press conference in Kiev on Wednesday, less than 24 hours after the Ukrainian authoritie­s reported he had been shot dead at his home in a contract-style killing blamed on Russia.

Ukraine’s security services said his death was faked to foil an assassinat­ion plot by Moscow, but Russian officials reacted with anger to what they branded an “anti-Russian provocatio­n”.

The operation fooled the media and angered press groups, who raised fears about the impact it could have on the work of journalist­s around the globe.

“There can be no grounds for faking a journalist’s death,” the head of Reporters Without Borders Christophe Deloire said on Wednesday, describing it as a “pathetic stunt”.

“The first question is to what extent were there no alternativ­es to saving Babchenko’s life in this way,” analyst Igor Yakovenko wrote on his blog, adding that there would inevitably be consequenc­es to the high-profile fakery.

An editorial in Russian daily Vedomosti argued the Babchenko operation “blurred the border between truth and fiction” and would lead to more distrust in the media.

Several Western commentato­rs and reporters said it would be difficult to trust official statements from Ukraine again.

Babchenko, who told the press he had been preparing to stage his death with secret services for several weeks, dismissed the criticism.

“I wish all these moralisers could be in the same situation – let them show their adherence to the principles of their high morals and die proudly holding their heads high without misleading the media,” he wrote on Facebook.

Other commentato­rs urged the media to focus on the fact Babchenko is alive.

“The main thing is that the killing of a journalist was foiled, the organisers are caught and the journalist is alive,” said Russian political commentato­r Evgeny Roizman.

“Do not love an Arkady that is alive less than a dead one. In a hybrid war there are sometimes hybrid victims,” Russian journalist Boris Grozovsky wrote on Facebook.

Kiev itself sought to justify the fake death that provoked both an outpouring of grief and a diplomatic spat with its former masters in Moscow.

“Thanks to this operation we were able to foil a cynical plot and document how the Russian security service was planning for this crime,” security service head Vasyl Grytsak said when he reintroduc­ed Babchenko, alive and well, to the world.

Grytsak said the authoritie­s had arrested the alleged mastermind of a plot against Babchenko, saying a Ukrainian citizen named only as “G” had offered to pay a hitman to carry out the killing after being recruited by Russian special forces and paid $40,000.

Moscow condemned the staged murder, with the Foreign Ministry saying: “Now the true motives are beginning to be revealed for this staging, which is totally, obviously, yet another anti-Russian provocatio­n”.

At the press conference Grytsak thanked Babchenko and his family, who he said were in the loop about the secret operation. The reporter, however, apologised to his wife for putting her through “this hell she had to live through for three days . . . but there was no other option”.

Babchenko, who has repeatedly said he faced death threats, vowed on Twitter to “die at 96 after dancing on Putin’s grave”.

“God, it got so boring being dead,” he wrote. “Good morning.”

 ?? SUPINSKY/AFP SERGEI ?? Russian anti-Kremlin journalist Arkady Babchenko (right) attends a press conference at Ukrainian Security Service headquarte­rs in Kiev on Wednesday.
SUPINSKY/AFP SERGEI Russian anti-Kremlin journalist Arkady Babchenko (right) attends a press conference at Ukrainian Security Service headquarte­rs in Kiev on Wednesday.

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