New
York, December 2, 2003Last week, a district court in the Belarus'
capital, Minsk, declared journalist Dmitry Zavadsky officially dead. Zavadsky,
a 29-year-old cameraman for the Russian public television network ORT,
disappeared in July 2000.
According to local press reports, the cameraman's widow, Svetlana Zavadskaya,
initiated the judicial process in October 2003. Zavadsky's body was never
recovered following his abduction.
On November 28, Judge Nataliya Andreyeva spent several hours examining
evidence presented by the Public Prosecutor's Office that the ORT cameraman
had died after his abduction and then officially changed Zavadsky's status
from missing to dead.
According to local journalists, the court made no mention of changing
the March 2002 kidnapping charge of two former members of the special
police to murder.
"This was done for property-related reasons so that my apartment can be
registered in my name," Zavadskaya told the Committee to Protect Journalists
in a telephone interview today. "I still want to find out the truth about
my husband and what happened to him."
The Public Prosecutor's Office ended its investigation into the Zavadsky
case in January 2003 claiming they had pursued all available leads in
the cameraman's disappearance.
Background
Zavadsky was reported missing on July 7, 2000, after he failed to
keep a scheduled late-morning rendezvous with his longtime colleague and
friend Pavel Sheremet at the airport in Minsk.
Zavadsky's neighbors told the police that they saw two men trailing the
journalist near his apartment building on the day he disappeared. But
a search for the journalist by local police and officials from the local
prosecutor's office turned up no clues.
Sheremet and Zavadsky's wife told reporters that Zavadsky began receiving
threatening phone calls from an unknown man after the cameraman returned
from Chechnya where he had worked on a documentary film about the war.
In August 2000, police classified Zavadsky's disappearance as a premeditated
crime, announced they had identified five suspects, and ruled out the
theory that Belarusian security agents had been involved in the crime.
Anonymous sources close to the investigation, however, informed the local
media that some of the suspects had confessed to killing Zavadsky and
named the place where his body was buried. According to these sources,
higher authorities prevented the investigators from exhuming the body.
On March 14, 2002, two former members of the special police unit, Valery
Ignatovich and Maxim Malik, were convicted in a closed trial and sentenced
to life in prison for abducting Zavadsky. Prosecutors argued that Ignatovich
and Malik kidnapped the journalist in reprisal for an interview he had
given to the independent Minsk daily Belorusskaya Delovaya Gazeta
during which he alleged that certain unnamed Belarusians had fought with
Chechen rebels against Russian forces.
Zavadsky's lawyer and family said the trial failed to examine credible
allegations that Belarusian authorities were also involved in the abduction.
In June 2002, two former employees of the Prosecutor General's Office,
Dmitry Petrushkevich and Oleg Sluchek, who had alleged that President
Alexandr Lukashenko had derailed the investigation because of evidence
linking a government-led death squad to Zavadsky's murder, were granted
asylum in the United States.

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