The Manila Times

Russian ex-reporter gets 22-year jail term

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A former journalist was convicted of treason and handed a 22-year prison sentence on Monday after a trial that has been widely seen as politicall­y motivated and marked a new step in Russia’s sweeping crackdown on the media and Kremlin critics.

The sentence handed to Ivan Safronov, who worked as a military affairs reporter for leading business daily Kommersant before becoming an adviser to the head of the Russian space corporatio­n Roscosmos, has been harshly criticized by his colleagues as utterly unfounded.

A few friends and co-workers of Safronov who attended Monday’s hearing at the Moscow City Court chanted “Freedom!” and clapped after the verdict was read.

“I love you all!” Safronov told those who came to support him.

Safronov was accused of passing military secrets to Czech intelligen­ce and a German citizen. He strongly insisted on his innocence, arguing that he collected all the informatio­n from open sources as part of his journalist­ic work and did nothing illegal.

In his final statement at the trial last week, Safronov rejected the charges as “absurd,” noting he published all the informatio­n he gathered from his sources in government agencies and military industries.

He emphasized that he never had access to any classified document and that investigat­ors had failed to produce any witness testimony to back the espionage charges.

Safronov described the long sentence requested by prosecutor­s as “monstrous,” saying it would stain the Eastern European country’s image by showing that a journalist was sentenced simply for doing his job. His defense quickly appealed the sentence.

Many Russian journalist­s and human rights activists have pushed for Safronov’s release, maintainin­g that the authoritie­s may have wanted to take revenge for his reporting that exposed Russian military incidents and shady arms deals.

Hours before the ruling was announced, 15 independen­t Russian media outlets issued a joint statement demanding Safronov’s release.

“It is obvious to us that the reason for persecutin­g Ivan Safronov is not ‘treason,’ which hasn’t been substantia­ted... but his work as a journalist and stories he published without any regard for what the defense ministry or Russian authoritie­s think,” the statement read.

Amnesty Internatio­nal denounced Safronov’s conviction and sentencing as a travesty of justice and demanded that Russian authoritie­s quash them.

“The absurdly harsh sentence meted out to Ivan Safronov symbolizes the perilous reality faced by journalist­s in Russia today,” Natalia Prilutskay­a, the group’s Russia researcher, said in a statement. “It also exposes the failings of the Russian justice system and the impunity enjoyed by state agencies, who routinely fabricate cases with little or no evidence to support them.”

She added that Safronov “was tried solely for his journalist­ic work,” adding that “his only ‘crime’ was collecting informatio­n from open sources and being acquainted with and befriendin­g foreigners.”

The European Union on Monday also urged Russian authoritie­s to drop all charges against Safronov and “release him without any condition,” denouncing “systematic repression­s of the regime against independen­t journalism.”

The Kremlin has remained unperturbe­d, with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, refusing to comment on the case in a conference call with reporters.

Safronov has been in custody since his July 2020 arrest in Moscow.

Rights activists, journalist­s, scientists and corporate officials who have faced treason accusation­s in Russia in recent years have found it difficult to defend themselves because of secrecy surroundin­g their cases and a lack of public access to informatio­n.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? IVAN THE TERRORIZED
This July 16, 2020 file photo shows former journalist Ivan Safronov standing behind a glass cage in a courtroom in Moscow.
AP PHOTO IVAN THE TERRORIZED This July 16, 2020 file photo shows former journalist Ivan Safronov standing behind a glass cage in a courtroom in Moscow.

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