New York, June 1, 2005— Police and Federal Security Service (FSB)
agents in the southern Russian republic of Ingushetia detained three
journalists from the Polish state television station TVP, according
to The Associated Press.
Mariusz Pilis, Marcin Mamon, and Tomasz Glowacki were detained on Sunday
around 8:30 p.m., at their hotel in Nazran, Ingushetia’s biggest city.
Several police officers took them to a local police station and held
them for 14 hours, where over a dozen police officers and at least one
FSB agent interrogated them in separate rooms, Pilis told CPJ in a telephone
interview today.
Pilis, who is producing a documentary film for TVP on life in the war-torn
republic of Chechnya, told CPJ that he and his crew were planning to
travel to the Chechen capital of Grozny on Monday to interview Chechen
officials. Both he and his crew had Russian visas and had received the
necessary press accreditation from the Foreign Ministry in order to
work on the documentary.
Police, however, said the journalists’ visas and accreditation cards
were no longer valid and confiscated 18 videotapes of footage the crew
had previously filmed in Chechnya, Pilis said. Police also took the
crew’s papers, television equipment, reporter’s notes, telephone contacts,
and film.
Armed FSB agents escorted the crew back to their hotel in Nazran on
Monday night but prevented them from leaving it for a few more hours,
the AP said. The agents did not return the crew’s videotapes and film.
Before leaving, “they [FSB agents] told us to leave Ingushetia immediately
because if we stayed one more night, we would face big problems,” Pilis
told CPJ.
The crew departed immediately for Vladikavkaz, the regional capital
of the republic of North Ossetia, which borders Ingushetia. The Polish
Consul-General Tomasz Klimansky is scheduled to fly there from Moscow
tomorrow in order to meet with the journalists, Pilis told CPJ.
“We condemn the detention and harassment of our colleagues from Polish
Television,” CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. “We call upon Russian
President Vladimr Putin to stop the continual intimidation of journalists
and allow the media to report on the war in Chechnya.”
