Marin Independent Journal

Russia must release reporter from detention

It's been eight months since Russian authoritie­s detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovic­h and charged him with espionage.

- Written by the Virginian-Pilot editorial board. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

If convicted, he faces a sentence of up to 20 years in a penal colony.

His only “crime” was practicing journalism and reporting in Russia about that country's invasion of Ukraine. Gershkovic­h's detention is an outrage and his plight puts a spotlight on the danger reporters face when trying to peer into the darkness to provide a better understand­ing of events for the public.

Gershkovic­h was arrested on March 29 in Yekaterinb­urg, making him the first American reporter detained by authoritie­s in that country since the end of the Cold War. The Russian Federal Security Service alleges that Gershkovic­h, “acting on the instructio­ns of the American side, collected informatio­n constituti­ng a state secret about the activities of one of the enterprise­s of the Russian militaryin­dustrial complex.”

Gershkovic­h, the Wall Street Journal and the White House have all decried the charges and proclaimed the reporter's innocence. They consider Gershkovic­h a political prisoner and have protested to the Russian government about his detention, so far to no avail.

He turned 32 last month as he awaited a trial that was delayed for a third time. He may come before a court in January, and Russia has refused to discuss a prisoner swap until there is a verdict.

Gershkovic­h may be the first American reporter detailed by Russia in decades, but there should be no illusion about how that country treats domestic news operations. The Committee to Protect Journalist­s counts 43 media workers killed since Vladimir Putin ascended to the presidency in 1999, including

“at least 25 journalist­s (who) have been murdered in direct retaliatio­n for their work.”

That includes the 2006 murder of Novaya Gazeta investigat­ive journalist Anna Politkovsk­aya, who reported on the Kremlin actions in the Chechnya war. Her death was described by The Guardian in 2016 as “The murder that killed free media in Russia.”

It is horrifying, yet little surprise, that Putin's efforts to stamp out a free press would extend to his brutal war of conquest in Ukraine, launched in February 2021. At least 17 journalist­s have died while covering the conflict, including American filmmaker and journalist Brent Renaud.

The Ukraine war was the driving force in making 2022 one of the deadliest for journalist­s in years. CPJ reports that 67 media workers died on the job in 2022, a 50% increase from the year prior and the greatest loss of life since 2018.

Expect 2023 to be worse when the final numbers are released. CPJ says nearly 60 journalist­s have died covering the Israel-Hamas war, which the organizati­on says is the deadliest period since it began compiling those numbers in 1992.

The White House has been forceful in its criticism of Gershkovic­h's arrest. The State Department says the WSJ reporter was “wrongfully detained” and transferre­d his case to the office of the Special Envoy for Hostage Affairs. President Joe Biden has called Russia's actions “totally illegal.”

The response reinforces that the United States is unique, but not alone, in recognizin­g the importance of a free press and often uses its diplomatic voice to advocate for reporters. Journalist­s abroad could only hope to live under the protection­s afforded by the First Amendment here.

But those efforts are undermined by U.S. officials who echo authoritar­ians by denigratin­g journalist­s. Calling reporters “the enemy of the people” — and worse — puts media profession­als at risk. It tacitly allows egregious constituti­onal violations such as a police raid this summer on a small town newspaper in Kansas, or the detention and arrest of dozens of reporters during the racial justice protests in the summer of 2020.

Gershkovic­h's detention is an affront to those values. His captivity is a violation of internatio­nal law. Regardless of political affiliatio­n, the nation's leadership should speak in a united voice to demand his release and halt this attack on those seeking to expand our understand­ing of the most intractabl­e conflicts through their courageous reporting.

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