New York, October 7, 2005 The Committee to Protect Journalists
today condemned an attack on a Ukrainian television reporter by an unidentified
assailant who warned her to stop investigating the political party headed
by former Prime Minister Yulia Timoshenko. Reporter Natalya Vlasova of
34 Kanal, a television station in the eastern industrial city of Dnepropetrovsk,
was attacked on Tuesday in a downtown street, and repeatedly hit in the
head and chest, her editor Ruslan Uralov told CPJ. She is in hospital
with concussion and bruising.
The attacker did not rob Vlasova but warned her to stop "poking her nose"
into the affairs of the Batkivshchina (Fatherland) Party, Uralov said.
The local press reported that Vlasova had received anonymous threatening
telephone phone calls for 10 days before the attack. She reported the
threats to the police the day before she was beaten. The caller threatened
to harm Vlasova, her parents, and six-year-old daughter if she did not
stop looking into the business dealings of Batkivshchina, the media said.
Vlasova was investigating the local Dnepropetrovsk branch of the party,
they said.
Uralov, who is editor-in-chief of 34 Kanal's news department, said the
station had not assigned Vlasova to such an investigation but she may
have been carrying it out on her own initiative. The Dnepropetrovsk police
opened a criminal case into the attack on Wednesday. CPJ is monitoring
the investigation.
President Viktor Yushchenko, who was swept to power after the so-called
Orange Revolution last year, dismissed Timoshenko and other ministers
in September after months of power struggles and allegations of corruption
inside his government.

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