New York, August 19, 2004 An investigative journalist
working on a story about government corruption was beaten in the middle
of the day on a main street in the southeastern Ukrainian city of Zaporozhye,
and taped interviews for his article were taken.
An unknown assailant intercepted Dmitry Shkuropat, a correspondent for
the independent weekly Iskra (Spark), about 1:30 p.m on August
17 and began beating him without explanation, according to Shkuropat and
local press reports. Shkuropat, who was on his way to Iskra's newsroom,
fell to the ground and lost consciousness.
In a telephone interview with CPJ today, Shkuropat said the assailant
took a bag containing two tape recorders with interviews for his pending
story. He said the taped material described alleged corruption involving
local and regional authorities.
Shkuropat was with a colleague from the news agency UNIAN, but she was
not harmed and nothing was taken from her.
Press reports said local police have opened an investigation. Attempts
by CPJ to reach police for comment were unsuccessful.
Iskra's director, Viktor Ilichyov, told CPJ that the newspaper
often receives intimidating phone calls from local business and political
authorities after publishing critical articles. He refused to identify
the callers, saying he feared retaliation.
Ilichyov said he believes Shkuropat was targeted for his work. "Given
the topics that Dmitry investigates," he said, "this attack cannot be
a random robbery." For the past two years, Shkuropat has reported on regional
crime and government corruption.
Two months ago, Shkuropat said, several unknown men threatened his girlfriend.
The assailants told her that she would be harmed unless Shkuropat stopped
his investigative reporting, he said.
"The attack on Shkuropat is very disturbing. We urge Ukrainian authorities
to investigate this case aggressively and bring those responsible to justice,"
CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said.

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