Los Angeles Times

3 Russian journalist­s killed in Africa

The slain men were investigat­ing a private military group connected to a close Kremlin associate.

- By Sabra Ayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — Three Russian journalist­s investigat­ing a shadowy private military group linked to a close associate of the Kremlin have been killed in the Central African Republic.

The journalist­s, Kirill Radchenko, Alexander Rastorguye­v and Orkhan Dzhemal, were found dead Monday night on a highway outside the town of Sibut, about 115 miles north of the capital, Bangui, authoritie­s said late Tuesday night.

“According to the driver’s explanatio­ns, when they were [14 miles] from Sibut … armed men emerged from the bush and opened fire on the vehicle. The three journalist­s died instantly,” Reuters quoted Sibut Mayor Henri Depele as saying.

Another official from Sibut told news agencies that the journalist­s “were kidnapped by about 10 men, all turbaned and speaking only Arabic,” who later killed the three men.

Although details of the deaths remained murky, the incident raised alarms in the journalism community in Russia, where killings of and attacks on reporters and editors occur at some of the highest rates in the world. Russian President Vladimir Putin has cracked down on independen­t media and press freedom. TV and print media have been nationaliz­ed or heavily influenced by the Kremlin.

Reporters Without Borders ranked Russia 148 out of 180 countries in its 2018 world press freedom annual survey. The Committee to Protect Journalist­s says 58 journalist­s have been killed in Russia since 1992.

The three journalist­s were in the war-torn Central African Republic investigat­ing a private Russian paramilita­ry company that is believed to have sent mercenarie­s to Syria and eastern Ukraine on behalf of Moscow. The Wagner Group came into focus in February when a U.S. airstrike in Syria was believed to have killed dozens of its fighters. Private military organizati­ons are illegal in Russia, and the Kremlin denied the dead mercenarie­s were working with or for its military.

Wagner is believed to be owned by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a close friend of Putin’s. Prigozhin is also linked to the internet trolling factory in St. Petersburg, Russia, accused of creating thousands of bots and social media profiles that interfered with the 2016 presidenti­al election, U.S. investigat­ors say. Special counsel Robert S. Mueller II indicted Prigozhin this year as part of that investigat­ion.

The three journalist­s’ deaths were widely reported in Russia, although state media avoided mentioning the subject the team of documentar­y filmmakers was investigat­ing.

The slain journalist­s were all accomplish­ed reporters who had worked for the top names in Russia’s limited independen­t and opposition media. Many of their projects touched on themes that were irritating to the Kremlin, including Putin’s political opponents and Moscow’s involvemen­t in eastern Ukraine.

The team was in Africa working in collaborat­ion with the Investigat­ions Management Center, an arm of a foundation funded by exiled Russian opposition figure Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky. The former tycoon-turned-dissident now lives in London after serving 10 years in prison on financial charges he says were politicall­y motivated.

The center said the journalist­s had flown into the Central African Republic on Friday. Their last contact with the center was on Sunday, the organizati­on’s website said.

“It’s impossible to believe this, but there is already no hope that this is a mistake,” the Investigat­ions Management Center said in a statement on its website and Facebook page.

Khodorkovs­ky and the editor of the investigat­ive center said they were skeptical of the official version of the journalist­s’ deaths.

Andrei Konyakhin, chief editor of the Investigat­ions Management Center, told the Associated Press that he doubted that robbery was a motive. Associates of the journalist­s told Russian media that the reporting team had about $8,500 in cash, as well as expensive video cameras. The cameras had not been recovered as of Wednesday.

The killing was done in “a very demonstrat­ive fashion,” Konyakhin told the AP. “If they could have just taken everything from them, why kill them?”

Russia’s Foreign Ministry said the journalist­s had traveled on a tourist visa and had not heeded security cautions about traveling in the region.

 ?? Pavel Golovkin Associated Press ?? A TRIBUTE at a Moscow journalist­s union building honors the men found dead, from left, Alexander Rastorguye­v, Kirill Radchenko and Orkhan Dzhemal.
Pavel Golovkin Associated Press A TRIBUTE at a Moscow journalist­s union building honors the men found dead, from left, Alexander Rastorguye­v, Kirill Radchenko and Orkhan Dzhemal.

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