Read more about press freedom conditions in Russia
Terry
Anderson Interviews Andrei Babitsky (July 17, 2000)
Putin's
Media War (March 27, 2000)
Babitsky's
"Crime" and Punishment (February 28, 2000)
New York, September 29, 2000 --- The trial of the Russian journalist
Andrei Babitsky, which has attracted the attention of the international
press freedom community, will begin on Monday, October 2 at 10 a.m.
in Makhachkala, capital of the Russian republic of Dagestan. Babitsky,
a Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) correspondent whose reporting
on the military conflict in Chechnya angered Russian authorities and
led to his detention last January, is being charged with carrying
false documents. If convicted, he faces a maximum fine of two months
salary or two years of community service.
"This trial is the latest tactic in a concerted Russian government
effort to punish Babitsky for his critical coverage of Chechnya,"
said Joel Simon, deputy director of the Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ). "This strategy is also intended to discourage other journalists
from filing independent reports on the Russian war effort. CPJ calls
on the government to drop the charges against Babitsky. We will be
monitoring this trial carefully."
At a press conference earlier this week, Babitsky, who has pleaded
not guilty, announced that he expected a guilty verdict because Russian
courts were not sufficiently independent to withstand government pressure.
On or around January 16, 2000, Russian military authorities secretly
detained Babitsky in a Russian-controlled area of Chechnya. His arrest
followed several weeks of harassment in retaliation for his coverage
of Russian military operations in the breakaway republic.
Babitsky's fate remained mysterious until late January, as the authorities
did not immediately announce that he was in military custody. He was
formally arrested on January 27, on the charge of "participating in
an armed formation" (this charge was later dropped). On February 3,
Russian military authorities abruptly handed Babitsky over to purported
Chechen rebels, whom Babitsky later claimed were loyal to Moscow.
On February 25, Babitsky re-surfaced in Makhachkala, capital of neighboring
Dagestan. Russian authorities promptly arrested him on the charge
of possessing a false Azeri passport, which Babitsky claimed had been
forced on him by his Chechen captors after they took away his own
documents. Three days later he was flown to Moscow and forbidden from
leaving the city before his trial.
END