Waterloo Region Record

Journalist­s are being killed to smother vital truths

Last year, organizati­on counted 262 journalist­s behind bars because of their work

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Three Russian journalist­s landed one day in late July in the Central African Republic, a former French colony, on the trail of a story.

Kirill Radchenko, Alexander Rastorguye­v and Orkhan Dzhemal were investigat­ing the activities of a shadowy Russian private mercenary company, Wagner Group, that had reportedly set up camps in the country and is owned by a crony of President Vladimir Putin. Three days later, the journalist­s were dead.

They were ambushed by gunfire on a remote road, at night. The facts are murky. Official statements claimed they were attacked by robbers. But others have questioned why, once they began seeking answers about a secretive business connected to the Kremlin, they were gunned down. Their driver was not killed and escaped. The Wagner Group, which also sent forces to Syria, was founded by Yevgeniy Prigozhin, the St. Petersburg catering magnate who also owned the troll factory known as the internet Research Agency used to interfere in the 2016 U.S. election.

The work of the three courageous journalist­s was being funded by the Investigat­ions Management Center, supported by exiled Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky. The three were experience­d. Dzhemal was the former political editor of Novaya Gazeta, a hard-hitting investigat­ive newspaper, and had covered wars in Georgia and Ukraine. Rastorguye­v was a director known for a documentar­y on the anti-Putin opposition. Radchenko was an accomplish­ed photograph­er. Khodorkovs­ky, who has become an outspoken critic of Putin’s authoritar­ian regime, announced that he and his former business partner Leonid Nevzlin are setting up a $5 million foundation to investigat­e violence against journalist­s targeted as a result of their profession­al duties.

Sadly, the killing and imprisonme­nt of journalist­s for their work is a scourge worldwide, including the wanton murders in the Capital Gazette newsroom in Annapolis, Maryland, on June 28. This year alone, 39 journalist­s have been killed in the line of duty, compared with 46 in all of last year, according to the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

Last year, the CPJ counted 262 journalist­s behind bars because of their work, and about half of all those were in just three countries: Turkey, China and Egypt. While these authoritar­ian regimes are the worst, journalism has proved hazardous in many other locations, including Myanmar, where two Reuters reporters are incarcerat­ed and being prosecuted for their revelatory digging into the brutal exile of the Rohingya Muslims, and Venezuela, where some 70 newspapers, radio stations and television outlets were forced to close last year.

To deter more killings and jailings, it is essential that every case be exposed and those who ordered the abuses be held to account. At its very heart, this violence is aimed at not only the reporters but also their readers and viewers in an attempt to hide vital truths and silence the voices that convey it.

Censorship is a corrosive tool in the black arts of dictators and autocrats, and violence against journalist­s is an extreme expression of their determinat­ion to smother the truth.

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