New York, September 11, 2000 --- Ruslan Musayev, a local reporter,
cameraman, and photographer for The Associated Press (AP), was captured
by Russian military forces in Chechnya on September 5, beaten, and
held in detention overnight. He was released the following morning
after paying US$600 to his guards, AP reported. This is the second
recent incident in which the Russian military harassed a journalist
in Chechnya.
Musayev had traveled to Grozny from southern Chechnya, where he resides,
to cover anticipated military operations in the city. That afternoon,
Russian troops stopped him in the local marketplace and asked for
his identification papers.
At the time of his arrest, Musayev did not have his press credentials
with him. Since other documents showed that he was not a resident
of Grozny, he was arrested, handcuffed, blindfolded, and transported--along
with seven other people--to Russian military headquarters in Khankala.
(Russian forces in Chechnya often use Russia's strict residency laws
to detain people, usually ethnic Chechen men of fighting age.)
Russian military authorities confiscated his passport, money, and
other valuables. When the prisoners arrived at the Russian military
base, Musayev was beaten, suffering multiple bruises and damage to
his lower ribs. He was then detained overnight, together with four
other Chechen men, in a covered pit near the military airfield in
Khankala.
The next morning he was interrogated by a Russian officer, who confiscated
his gold watch and US$600 in cash. Russian soldiers then drove Musayev
to the Chechen-Ingushetian border, where he was released. Later, Russian
officials in both Chechnya and Moscow denied that the arrest ever
occurred.
"We object to Russian officials restricting the access of journalists
seeking to cover developments in Chechnya, which is a topic of vital
public interest. This arbitrary detention and physical abuse of an
ethnic Chechen journalist by Russian military forces is particularly
outrageous," said Alex Lupis, CPJ's Europe program coordinator. "We
call on Russian authorities to ensure that their forces refrain from
physically abusing journalists and obstructing their access to Chechnya."
In a separate incident on August 30, General Vadim Timchenko, commander
of Russian military forces in Chechnya, announced that reporter Vadim
Chelikov and cameraman Vladimir Agafonov of the Moscow-based television
network ORT would be deported from Chechnya and stripped of their
authorization to work in the area.
The deportation order came in response to the ORT crew's report, aired
earlier that day, about a fire at the Russian military base in Khankala.
ORT claimed that the fire had been caused inadvertently by Russian
forces. While other journalists also reported the fire, Gen. Timchenko
claimed that ORT's video footage revealed the secret location of the
Russian military base.
This case may indicate a new trend in the Russian military's treatment
of journalists in Chechnya. In the past, the military has tended to
deny foreign correspondents access to Chechnya or detain local Chechen
journalists, rather than expelling visiting Russian journalists from
the strife-torn region.
END