Toronto Star

‘Exiled’ journalist­s duck censorship

Meduza editor Galina Timchenko, centre, speaks with journalist­s at the Meduza Project office in Riga, Latvia.

- Carol J. Williams is a reporter for the Los Angeles Times.

The office of the Meduza Project brims with light and open space, a metaphor for the freedom that the dozen journalist­s who left Russia to avoid censorship feel in their newfound home.

The whitewashe­d walls of a 200-year-old former grain warehouse where the reporters work are cut with faceted windows overlookin­g the Daugava River and the sun-splashed plains east of Riga.

The 11 a.m. news meeting is running overtime as the journalist­s ponder how best to present the latest actions of Russian state media censors in outlawing reports on the motives behind suicide.

The edict is intended to prevent a Meduza Project report from spreading to publicatio­ns in Russia: it says that at least 12 cancer sufferers in Moscow took their lives in February because government-run hospitals denied them pain management medication­s.

“We were looking into why the government has gotten involved in determinin­g who gets pain medication­s and who doesn’t,” said Konstantin Benyumov, editor of Meduza’s English-language edition.

Meduza’s reporters and editors are an outgrowth of the late Lenta.ru investigat­ive news organizati­on that, like most independen­t media in Russia, has been subverted by politicall­y motivated firings and stifled by government edicts criminaliz­ing reporting on embarrassi­ng issues.

Like its namesake mythologic­al Greek monster whose severed head retained the power to turn into stone all who gazed into her eyes, the Meduza Project’s self-exiled Russian staff lives on, bedeviling Kremlin efforts to control and manipulate informatio­n.

A year ago, Lenta editor Galina Timchenko was fired, reportedly for publishing an interview with a member of the Ukrainian nationalis­t militia Right Sector.

“It was just the pretext for her firing, as it wasn’t banned at that time,” Benyumov said of the Ukrainian paramilita­ry now battling pro-Russia separatist­s in eastern Ukraine.

In solidarity with their editor, 74 of Lenta’s 82 employees resigned, leaving the publicatio­n ripe for ideologica­l takeover by the Kremlin.

Six months ago, Timchenko and a dozen Lenta veterans moved to Riga, bankrolled by donations from well-heeled Russian supporters of media freedom. They seek to resurrect their crusading journalism and recover their loyal readership.

Seventy per cent of Meduza’s readership is in Russia, and most of the rest is in countries with large Russian émigré communitie­s: Israel, Germany, the United States.

The website is a compilatio­n of original reporting by colleagues still in Russia and posted articles of other media, domestic and foreign. Investigat­ive projects that brought Lenta to the forefront of Russian journalism continue, with collaborat­ion between the remote headquarte­rs here and stealthy reporters and freelancer­s in Russia.

The transplant­ed journalist­s say they miss home but feel comfortabl­e in exile. “We all have jobs here, so we don’t feel like refugees.,” Benyumov said.

 ?? CAROL J. WILLIAMS/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ??
CAROL J. WILLIAMS/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

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