New
York, November 22, 2005Two Chechen men charged in the July
2004 slaying of Forbes Russia editor Paul Klebnikov in Moscow
will be tried in secret at the direction of the Russian prosecutor general,
according to local and international press reports. The Committee to
Protect Journalists urged prosecutors to reconsider the decision and
hold the proceedings in public.
The prosecutor's office said Monday that it was ready to proceed against
the two defendants. Moscow City Court spokeswoman Anna Usachyova said
today that a trial date would be set in two weeks. "The criminal trial
will be held at the Moscow City Court in a closed regime, since there
is information that is classified as ‘secret,' " Usachyova said, according
to the state news agency RIA-Novosti.
"We call on Russian authorities to hold an open trial so that the media
can report on the case and the public can evaluate the government's
evidence," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "Many courts have
successfully protected state secrets by closing portions of testimony
and sealing evidence. Given Russia's record of impunity in the murders
of journalists, public and transparent proceedings would establish far
greater credibility."
The prosecutor is charging the two suspectsKazbek Dukuzov and
Musa Vakhayevwith committing a series of other crimes, including
contract killings, extortion, robbery and participating in a criminal
group, the state news agency ITAR-TASS reported. Russian authorities
say they are seeking two other purported members of the criminal gang,
Magomed Dukuzov and Magomed Edilsultanov, in connection with the Klebnikov
slaying and other crimes, ITAR-TASS reported.
In June, the prosecutor accused Chechen separatist leader Khozh Akhmed
Nukhayev of ordering the murder of Klebnikov, allegedly in retaliation
for the journalist's 2003 Russian-language book, Conversation with
a Barbarian: Interviews with a Chechen Field Commander on Banditry and
Islam. Authorities say they are also seeking Nukhayev.
Peter Klebnikov, Paul's brother, told CPJ that his family has "confidence
in the validity of the case" against the two defendants about to go
on trial. "However, like everyone else, the family is still awaiting
evidence that would implicate Nukhaev as the mastermind."
Klebnikov, 41, an American journalist of Russian descent, was gunned
down outside his Moscow office at around 10 p.m. on July 9, 2004. From
the beginning of the investigation, Russian authorities described Klebnikov's
case as a contract murder and said they believed he was killed because
of his work. Klebnikov had written a number of books and articles that
angered his subjects. Among other topics, he wrote about the shadowy
world of Russia's business tycoons.
Klebnikov is one of 12 journalist murdered in contract-style killings
since Russian President Vladimir Putin took office in 2000. None of
the murders has been solved, according to CPJ's analysis.
See the list of the slain journalists.

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