Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Daily threatened over Chechnya gay torture story

- Reuters

Russia’s most famous campaignin­g newspaper said on Friday it had appealed to the Kremlin to protect its staff after Chechen clerics said the paper faced “retributio­n” for alleging that gay men in Chechnya were being tortured and killed.

Novaya Gazeta published an article this month which said authoritie­s in the majority Muslim southern Russian republic had rounded up over 100 gay men or men suspected of being gay and tortured them. It said at least three of them had been killed.

Kremlin critics saw the report as further evidence that Moscow allows authoritie­s in Chechnya to run the region - which has been consumed by two wars since the Soviet collapse - as a feudal fiefdom in exchange for separatist and radical Islamist sentiment being suppressed.

Chechnya’s Moscow-backed president Ramzan Kadyrov denies allegation­s human rights are routinely flouted. His spokesman Alvi Karimov called lie”, saying there were no gay men in Chechnya to be persecuted. “Nobody can detain or harass anyone who is simply not present in the republic,” Karimov told Interfax news agency.

Novaya’s report also caused outrage among Chechnya’s Muslim clerics, who adopted a resolution saying it had insulted the dignity and Islamic faith of Chechen men and society.

“We promise that retributio­n will catch up with the hate-mongers wherever and whoever they are and with no statute of limitation­s,” the resolution read.

Dmitry Muratov, Novaya’s editor, said on Friday that the resolution was an incitement to violence and that he was worried about his staff’s safety.

“This resolution is encouragin­g religious fanatics to retaliate against our journalist­s,” he said in a statement, calling on the authoritie­s to protect journalist­s and stop anyone whipping up hatred against them.

Two of Novaya’s reporters specialisi­ng in Chechnya have been murdered in the last decade Neither case has been fully

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