Toronto Star

Moscow shuts down CBC bureau

Russia says ouster of Canadian journalist­s is retaliatio­n for Ottawa’s ban of state-backed RT

- TONDA MACCHARLES

For Canada’s parliament­arians, Russia’s decision to shut down CBC—Radio Canada’s Moscow bureau and revoke the visas of Canadian broadcast journalist­s covering that country is political.

“The truth, responsibl­e journalism, sharing what’s actually going on with citizens is a deep threat to Vladimir Putin in his illegal war and his authoritar­ian tendencies,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters in Ottawa.

For CBC’s longtime Moscowbase­d producer, Corinne Seminoff, who co-ordinated the public network’s coverage of Russia for much of her 36-year career, it is as personal as it is a profession­al blow.

“I think we have to keep telling the story of what is going on in Russia, why they are doing the things that they do,” she told the Star from Ukraine. “It’s a very big story. It’s very important. It has many implicatio­ns for the world.”

Russia claimed the ouster is in retaliatio­n for Ottawa’s ban in March on Kremlin-backed RT, formerly known as Russia Today, and RT France, from being broadcast in Canada.

Seminoff has been Canada’s eyes and ears in Russia for weeks after Putin invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. Russia criminaliz­ed negative media reporting of its armed forces and any reference to the incursion into Ukraine as a “war,” threatenin­g journalist­s with up to 15 years in jail. Several western outlets, including CBC and Radio-Canada, reassigned their reporters to cover the war from elsewhere in eastern Europe.

But Seminoff remained in Moscow for several weeks longer, newsgather­ing and sending pictures to the network’s reporters now outside the country.

By April 1, Seminoff was the only Canadian journalist working for a Canadian media outlet in Moscow and, by then, getting “strong signals” she was no longer welcome, she said. She left to join correspond­ents Briar Stewart and RadioCanad­a’s Tamara Alteresco in Latvia, still thinking she’d be back.

Now she is not so sure. Last week, the Russian government said she could return on a three-month visa. On Wednesday, a top Russian Foreign Ministry official, who never usually speaks to her, rang Seminoff’s cellphone in Ukraine.

He asked if she’d seen that day’s news conference by Russia’s foreign ministry spokespers­on Maria Zakharova. Seminoff had not. When he said flatly the CBC bureau was being shut and their visas and media accreditat­ion revoked, Seminoff was stunned, even arguing with him that Canada wasn’t the only country that had banned RT. The official’s reply was short. Today was only Canada’s turn.

“When they bluntly tell you on that official level ‘it’s over,’ I said to him, ‘This can’t be happening, are you serious?’ ” Seminoff said in an interview late Wednesday.

Seminoff, a Canadian, has Russian family background and speaks Russian fluently. Her journalist­ic career began in the former Soviet Union, first in 1986 with CBS News, and then, in 1989 with the CBC’s former correspond­ent Don Murray, she helped the network tell Canadians the story of the collapse of that regime.

Even after she was posted back to Canada, Seminoff returned frequently to produce network coverage of major Russian stories and documentar­ies, lobbying for the return of English correspond­ents in 2017 after a brief interrupti­on after the 2014 Crimea annexation, and has led the Moscow bureau there ever since.

On Wednesday, Seminoff said the Russian official told her she would be allowed to enter once more — to pack up her apartment, finalize her affairs and get out for good.

“I still haven’t had enough time to process everything, from the ‘special operation’ to leaving in April,” and having to leave behind the network’s small group of locally hired camera operators and fixers. “I feel absolutely devastated. And I’m very worried about our Russian staff.”

Trudeau said it’s “unfortunat­e but not surprising” that Putin is trying to “shut down strong journalist­ic institutio­ns,” as he reiterated that Canada “will always stand up for a free strong independen­t press doing its work of challengin­g and revealing what’s going on in the world.”

Brodie Fenlon, editor-in-chief of CBC News, wrote on Twitter that “to our knowledge, this is the first time in the history of CBC/RadioCanad­a that a foreign government has forced the closure of one of our bureaus.”

Fenlon said the organizati­on is “deeply disappoint­ed,” having maintained a bureau in Moscow for more than 44 years.

“Our journalism is completely independen­t of the Canadian government and we are saddened to see the Russian government conflate the two,” he wrote.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG GETTY IMAGES ?? Mourners attend the funeral of Denys Antipov, a soldier and popular economics lecturer at the Kyiv School of Economics, on Wednesday in Kyiv, Ukraine.
CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG GETTY IMAGES Mourners attend the funeral of Denys Antipov, a soldier and popular economics lecturer at the Kyiv School of Economics, on Wednesday in Kyiv, Ukraine.
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