New
York, September 18, 2003Lithuanian border guards detained and
expelled a film crew from the independent, Moscow-based national television
station NTV on Sunday, September 14, after they filmed a protest on a
train near the Lithuanian-Russian border.
According to Russian and Lithuanian press reports, NTV journalist Vadim
Fefilov, cameraman Vladimir Chervyakov, and sound technician Aleksey
Zolotov arrived at the Kena border post in Lithuania at about 10 a.m.
on September 14 on a train heading from Moscow to Kaliningrad, a Russian
exclave between Poland and Lithuania.
When Lithuanian State Border Guard Service officials entered the train
to check passports and visas, a group of Russian activists from the
ultra-nationalist National Bolshevik Party who were traveling in the
same car as the NTV crew began protesting new visa regulations requiring
Russian citizens traveling to Kalinigrad to obtain a “transit
document” in order to cross Lithuania into the exclave.
The journalists filmed the protests, and border guards detained Fefilov
and Chervyakov. They were held for five hours, fined 225 litas (about
US$75) each, and expelled from Lithuania on the next train to Moscow.
According to Russian and Lithuanian press reports, Zolotov continued
filming the protest with his personal video camera and was later detained
by the border guards along with the National Bolshevik Party protesters.
The guards also confiscated his handheld camera. The State Border Guard
Service’s Web site (www.pasienis.lt)
reported that Zolotov was fined 300 litas (about $US100) and ordered
to leave the country within 48 hours.
“The NTV crew was doing nothing more than covering a news event,
and to restrict them because the event happened to occur on a train
near the border is outrageous,” said CPJ Executive Director Ann
Cooper. “Lithuanian authorities should apologize to these journalists
and ensure that such violations of press freedom do not occur in the
future.”
