New York, May 12, 2005The Committee
to Protect Journalists condemns the detention and harassment this week
of a Latvian television crew by local police and federal agents in Pytalovo,
a district on the Latvia-Russia border.
Reporter Ivo Kirsblats, cameraman Maris Jurgensons, and driver Eriks Pakalns
of the Riga-based Latvian public television LTV were detained for three
hours on the morning of May 9 at the Pytalovo police station. Police forced
them to destroy video footage and to leave the country by 6 p.m. that
day, Kirsblats told CPJ in a telephone interview yesterday.
"We thought we'd better leave," Kirsblats said. "We were afraid for our
safety."
The crew arrived in Russia on the evening of May 8 to cover the Victory
Day celebration in Pytalovo the next day, and do a feature about the way
people live on the border, Kirsblats told CPJ.
The crew had obtained proper press accreditation from Russia's Foreign
Ministry on May 7 and obtained one-month Russian visas, according to Kirsblats
and LTV Editor-in-Chief Inta Lase. They had planned to complete their
assignment in three days.
Local police detained the crew after it started shooting footage on the
morning of May 9. Several police officers, a person who identified himself
as a Federal Security Services (FSB) agent, and at least one immigration
officer questioned the crew members, Kirsblats told CPJ. Police accused
the journalists of filming forbidden sites, and the immigration officer
told them "he had never seen such press passes as theirs," Kirsblats told
CPJ.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement late yesterday that the
Latvian crew was filming without authorization a railway station that
serves as an international transit point, Agence France-Presse reported.
"The journalists tried to film the railway station as background footage
for their story," Lase told CPJ in a telephone interview today. "The railway
is old and does not work anymore. It used to connect Latvia with Russia,
and the crew wanted to use it as a symbol of the lost connection between
the two countries. If that was a forbidden site, nowhere was it noted
so."
Vandals broke the windshield of the LTV crew's car, which was parked next
to its hotel, while the journalists were being detained.
"We would like to go back [to do the story] but we're anxious. This time
our car was vandalized; maybe we would be attacked next time," Kirsblats
said.
The crew members tried to take additional footage of people in the Pytalovo
streets before leaving Russia, but police ordered them to stop taping
and erase the footage.
"We're dismayed by the unjustified actions of the Pytalovo police
against journalists who were doing their jobs," CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper said. "We call on Russian authorities to ensure that international
journalists can do their work without such unwarranted obstruction."
The incident comes during border treaty talks between Latvia and Russia,
in which the national affiliation of the Pytalovo district is in dispute.

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