The Guardian (USA)

Journalist resigns in protest as Al Jazeera pulls oligarch investigat­ion

- Jamie Doward

Al Jazeera is at the centre of a row over its decision to pull an investigat­ion into a black propaganda campaign waged against a London-based businessma­n whose Russian father-in-law, a mining magnate, has apparently fallen foul of rivals linked to the Kremlin.

The journalist who carried out the investigat­ion, Will Jordan, who has been with the broadcaste­r for a decade, has resigned in protest at the decision which he claims amounts to censorship.

A Fishy Business examined how enemies of Alexander Shchukin, who is currently under arrest on an extortion charge, sought the support of British MPs and peers as they attempted to have the oligarch’s daughter Elena, and his son-in-law, Ildar Uzbekov, hit with an unexplaine­d wealth order, something that would see their assets frozen.

The investigat­ion, conducted in tandem with a separate Observer inquiry, examined the role played by well-connected Russian lobbyists, journalist­s and fixers in promoting a film, Blood Coal Money, that alleged – without any evidence – that Shchukin was behind the disappeara­nce of a mine administra­tor in Siberia.

The film, whose London premiere was scrapped when Uzbekov brought legal proceeding­s, was produced as part of what was portrayed as a grassroots campaign launched on behalf of Siberian coalminers who wanted justice for the missing administra­tor.

In reality, A Fishy Business revealed that it was chiefly an attempt to seize the Shchukin family’s assets – pushed by powerful businessme­n, several of who claim to be close to President Putin.

“My family are the victims of an attempted smear campaign,” Uzbekov told the Observer. “This is how Russian oligarchs work these days – via media campaigns, fabricatio­ns, hacking and the blatant exploitati­on of western government­s and legal systems including the UK parliament. However, it doesn’t stop there – we’ve had several death threats too.”

It is believed that Jordan’s 3,000word resignatio­n letter claims that several parties representi­ng Russian interests lobbied against the investigat­ion’s broadcast which was scheduled for late summer.

But it is unclear why the broadcast was dropped. Al Jazeera declined to comment.

The decision comes at a sensitive time.

Although the Qatar government funds the broadcaste­r it insists it “exerts no editorial influence of control”.

The broadcaste­r’s enemies allege this is not the case and want Al Jazeera to be registered as a foreign agent with the US Justice department. This would see it branded as a propaganda arm, similar to Russia Today, something that would undermine its reputation for independen­t journalism.

It is understood that senior Al Jazeera executives had concerns about A Fishy Business due to the nature of its subject. Hacked emails relating to the black propaganda campaign turned out to be fabricated making it difficult to establish the truth of who was behind it, its motivation­s and intentions. The Observerpu­blishes its own investigat­ion into the affair on Sunday.

This is how Russian oligarchs work these days – via media campaigns, fabricatio­ns and hacking Ildar Uzbekov

 ??  ?? The film Blood Coal Money, which levelled unfounded allegation­s at Alexander Shchukin, was being promoted by a group of wellconnec­ted Russians.
The film Blood Coal Money, which levelled unfounded allegation­s at Alexander Shchukin, was being promoted by a group of wellconnec­ted Russians.

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