The Guardian (USA)

Vladimir Putin urged to end crackdown on Russian journalist­s

- Andrew Roth in Moscow

Russia’s leading independen­t media have appealed to Vladimir Putin and other top government officials to halt a crackdown on journalist­s under which some of the countries’ top outlets have been declared foreign agents or banned outright over the last year.

More than a dozen media, including Meduza, TV Rain and Novaya Gazeta have signed an open letter to the government calling on it to remove individual journalist­s and their outlets from its blacklists and repeal laws on “foreign agents” and “undesirabl­e organisati­ons” altogether.

“We are convinced that these events are part of a coordinate­d campaign to destroy independen­t Russian media, whose entire ‘guilt’ is constitute­d by their honestly fulfilling their profession­al duties to their readers,” the letter reads. “We demand that this campaign be halted right now.”

Top outlets and individual journalist­s have been declared foreign agents under a 2017 Russian law that requires them to affix a disclaimer to any content they produce and provide reports on their funding. They argue it is a death sentence for independen­t media because it scares off advertiser­s, potential sources and reporting partners.

The list includes prominent outlets such as the US-funded Radio Free Europe, the Riga-based Meduza, Bellingcat partner The Insider, TV Rain, the investigat­ive website iStories, regional publicatio­ns and others, including prominent human rights activists.

Some outlets said they have been forced to close because a foreign agent declaratio­n had destroyed their business models. VTimes, a publicatio­n staffed mainly by former Vedomosti reporters who left that paper during a censorship row, ceased publicatio­n earlier this year after being declared a foreign agent.

Others have been banned outright. The investigat­ive news outlet Proekt was declared an undesirabl­e organisati­on earlier this year in what was widely seen as revenge for a series of blockbuste­r investigat­ions into senior members of government and businessme­n with reported ties to Putin.

The organisati­on also published an investigat­ion that claimed that it had identified a young woman who was Putin’s daughter, allegedly born to the Russian president’s mistress.

Despite the open letter, the government does not appear likely to halt the crackdown on media. A senior BBC correspond­ent is expected to leave the country by the end of the month because her visa was not extended, indicating that foreign media may also come under greater pressure in a scenario similar to that in China.

 ??  ?? The independen­t channel TV Rain is among the outlets the government has designated a foreign agent. Photograph: Denis Kaminev/AP
The independen­t channel TV Rain is among the outlets the government has designated a foreign agent. Photograph: Denis Kaminev/AP

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