Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Russia: News outlets demand end to media crackdown

Russian journalist­s say the "foreign agent" law is leading media organizati­ons to shutdown. But the Kremlin insists the label is necessary to protect Russia.

-

Several Russian media outlets on Friday demanded the end of a "state campaign" against independen­t journalism.

Journalist­s in Russia have faced mounting pressure in the run-up to parliament­ary elections in September.

In recent months, Russian authoritie­s have declared several media outlets and NGOs as "for

eign agents," a label that requires them to carry out tedious administra­tive procedures and

indicate their status on everything they publish.

Media outlets addressed Russian President Vladimir Putin and other top officials in an open letter.

What did the letter say?

The letter was signed by around half a dozen local media outlets and Forbes Russia, as well as the Meduza news website and Dozhd TV channel — both of which have been declared foreign agents this year.

"We, journalist­s and editors of Russian and Russian-language media, demand an immediate end to the state campaign against the independen­t press," it said.

The letter added that measures such as the "foreign agent" status "directly violate" the constituti­on, media laws and freedom of speech.

Meduza wrote: "These statuses either lead to media being shut down or create discrimina­tory conditions for them to work."

How did the Kremlin respond?

Russian authoritie­s said the appeals were emotional and rejected the demands laid out in the letter.

The Kremlin insisted that the

designatio­ns showed that the foreign agent law was protecting Russia from foreign interferen­ce.

"The law should exist and will exist," Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, adding that it was because "NGOs and journalist­s are often used" by foreign countries interferin­g in "the affairs of our country." However, Peskov said that how the law is being enforced "should be discussed."

 ??  ?? Russian police recently arrested journalist­s protesting the foreign agent law
Russian police recently arrested journalist­s protesting the foreign agent law

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany