New York, April 25, 2005Police in the Russian
city of Volokolamsk detained Irina Petrushova, editor of the Kazakh opposition
weekly Respublika Delovoye Obozreniye, for two days at the request
of Kazakh authorities, she told the Committee to Protect Journalists shortly
after her release today.
Petrushova, a 2002 winner of CPJ's International Press Freedom Award,
said Kazakh authorities had sought to extradite her on alleged tax violations,
but the prosecutor- general's office in Moscow determined she was being
held improperly. Petrushova, taken into custody Saturday afternoon, was
released at 3 p.m. today after the prosecutor ruled that the Kazakh warrant
had expired, she said in a telephone interview.
Petrushova fled Kazakhstan in 2002 after enduring threats and harassment.
A Russian citizen, she relocated to her home country and continues to
edit the Kazakh weekly even as Kazakh authorities continue to pursue her.
Petrushova was detained by police in St. Petersburg on similar tax charges
in March 2004, but released after Russian police said they did not want
to get involved in Kazakhstan's political matters.
[Read more about Petrushova's earlier detention.]
Russian authorities appeared to use a ruse to pick up Petrushova over
the weekend. Authorities told her Friday that her passport renewal was
ready at the Interior Ministry's Passport and Visa Service in Volokolamsk.
But when Petrushova arrived at the passport office on Saturday, she said,
four police officers took her to the Interior Ministry's temporary detention
unit, where she was searched and held for the next two days. Police denied
Petrushova's lawyer, Vladimir Bityutskih, access to his client until he
threatened to publicize the detention, according to Petrushova and Russian
press reports.
Petrushova said the detention left her and her relatives fearful. "My
family and I were afraid that I might be abducted and taken some place,"
Petrushova told CPJ.
"We condemn the detention of our colleague Irina Petrushova," CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper said today. "It is outrageous that Kazakh authorities
continue to harass and intimidate her in exile in neighboring Russia."
Petrushova has faced a pattern of harassment from Kazakh authorities.
She was forced to leave Kazakhstan in fall 2002 after numerous incidents
of harassment and intimidation in retaliation for her reporting on high-level
corruption. Her newspaper had to change its name after being subjected
to politically motivated lawsuits. And between 2000 and 2002, Delovoye
Obozreniye Respublika (now Respublika Delovoye Obozreniye),
was forced to change its printer numerous times after government officials
pressured printers into refusing services to the weekly. In March 2002,
Petrushova received a funeral wreath from an anonymous "fan;" two months
later, Respublika's staff in Almaty found a decapitated dog hanging
from an office window with a threatening note attached. (The dog's head
was later found at Petrushova's door with a similar note.) Three days
after that incident, the newspaper's offices were firebombed. Fearing
for her safety, Petrushova finally left Kazakhstan for Russia.
Petrushova's weekend detention coincided with the Eurasia Media Forum
in Kazakhstan's financial capital, Almaty, which concluded yesterday.
The international conference, whose major organizer is Kazakh President
Nursultan Nazarbayev's daughter, Dariga, drew international executives
and journalists to talk about press freedom and other topics. Some opposition
and press freedom advocates saw the forum as an effort to deflect international
attention away from the government's tightening grip on opposition media.
Today, Kazakhstan authorities published a law that bans election street
rallies, apparently an attempt to prevent an uprising similar to Ukraine's
"Orange Revolution," Reuters reported. Presidential elections in Kazakhstan
are scheduled for December 2006.

|