Imperial Valley Press

Ukraine raids Russian media outlets, arrests journalist

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MOSCOW (AP) — Ukraine’s state security agency raided offices of two Russian stateowned media outlets in the Ukrainian capital Tuesday and leveled treason accusation­s against a journalist, a move that drew sharp criticism from the top trans-Atlantic security and rights group.

Ukraine’s domestic security agency, the SBU, said the raids of the Kiev offices of the RIA Novosti news agency and RT television were part of its investigat­ion into Russian media outlets being “used as tools in a hybrid war against Ukraine.”

The agency said the head of RIA Novosti’s Ukrainian office, Kirill Vyshinskiy, was detained for alleged treason, a crime that carries a prison term of up to 15 years upon conviction.

Relations between Moscow and Kiev soured in 2014 when Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimea and threw its weight behind separatist­s in eastern Ukraine.

The Ukrainian government has long blamed Russian state media for fanning the flames of the war in the east, which so far has killed more than 10,000 people.

Moscow angrily protested Tuesday’s raids.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov denounced the Ukrainian action as an “unacceptab­le” attack on freedom of speech and urged the West to condemn it “without any double standards.”

Harlem Desir, a media freedom representa­tive at the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe, a top security and rights group, expressed “serious concern” about the raids.

“The fight against propaganda must not fall short of internatio­nal standards and should not represent disproport­ionate interferen­ce in media activities,” Desir said in a statement.

“OSCE participat­ing states have committed to facilitati­ng the conditions under which journalist­s from one participat­ing state exercise their profession in another participat­ing state.”

In Washington, U.S. State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said the United States shared concern about Russian propaganda, but noted that Ukraine must take care to ensure it abides by the law, including internatio­nal human rights law.

The raids came several hours before Russian President Vladimir Putin traveled to southern Russia to attend the opening ceremony of a bridge linking Russia and the Crimean peninsula.

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