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Second editor killed in 10 days as fear grips Moscow

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  • Second editor killed in 10 days as fear grips Moscow

    The Independent

    Second editor killed in 10 days as fear grips Moscow

    By Andrew Osborn in Moscow

    19 July 2004

    Russia's jittery foreign press corps was plunged into mourning yesterday
    for the second time in as many weeks after another foreign journalist was
    murdered in Moscow.

    The killing of Paila Peloyan, the Armenian editor of the Russian-language
    monthly, Armenian Lane, comes barely a week after Paul Klebnikov, the US
    editor of the Russian version of Forbes magazine, was gunned down in cold
    blood. Nobody has been arrested for his murder.

    Mr Peloyan's body was found dumped by the side of the city's outer ring
    road or MKAD far from the city centre on Saturday morning.

    He had multiple stab wounds in the chest and had been savagely beaten; his
    skull was cracked and his face covered in blood and bruises.

    Information about his last movements is sketchy, though he is known to
    have died between two and three o'clock on Saturday morning and his body
    lay undiscovered for at least four hours.

    Investigators say they have crawled over the crime scene in order to try
    to find out what happened and prosecutors have opened a criminal case into
    the killing.

    They are not ruling out the possibility that Mr Peloyan was murdered
    because of his professional activity.

    In contrast to the late Mr Klebnikov, however, Mr Peloyan's work appears
    relatively uncontroversial. While the dead American journalist made waves
    by publicising the names of Russia's wealthiest people and delving into
    their often insalubrious financial affairs, Mr Peloyan's magazine was an
    arts publication.

    Moscow's Armenian diaspora, Armenian Lanecarried features about
    literature, the arts and history and included prose and poetry from
    Armenian writers. Nobody was answering the phones at the magazine's Moscow
    office yesterday.

    That Mr Peloyan's murder comes so soon after that of Mr Klebnikov is
    likely to unsettle foreign and Russian journalists alike. Mr Klebnikov was
    killed in a drive-by shooting by at least two gunmen and died in a hail of
    bullets just yards from his office. His murder had all the hallmarks of a
    contract killing.

    An online news site, the Russia Journal, spoke yesterday of "an undeclared
    war against media representatives" and claimed that Russian and foreign
    journalists had become an endangered species in Moscow.

    It said: "These two senseless killings have once again put the issue of
    journalists' safety in Russia back on the agenda and raised well-founded
    concerns among representatives of the fourth estate.

    "This is not because killing journalists is a rarity in Moscow or in
    Russia at large but two murders of journalists in less than 10 days in a
    city that is not at war is something unusual, even by Russian standards."
    The Russian media itself made far less of Mr Peloyan's murder, possibly
    because as an Armenian hailing from a part of the former Soviet Union once
    ruled by the Russians, he would not be considered a bona fide foreigner
    like Mr Klebnikov.

    It is estimated that two million Armenians live in Russia and the two
    countries have a close relationship going back hundreds of years.
    Officials at the Armenian embassy in Moscow said that they were profoundly
    shocked by Mr Peloyan's murder. "Naturally we learnt of this information
    with great regret," Armen Gevondyan, the embassy press secretary, told
    Interfax news agency.

    "We are taking all the measures we can together with Russia's law
    enforcement authorities to ascertain the circumstances of Mr Peloyan's
    death." Mr Peloyan is the 16th journalist to be murdered in Russia since
    2000 when Vladimir Putin assumed the presidency. The US-based Committee to
    Protect Journalists says the country is one of the deadliest places to be
    a reporter. It addressed an open letter to Mr Putin after Mr Klebnikov's
    killing, complaining about "the climate of lawlessness and impunity".

    "Cases [of journalists being killed] have not been properly investigated
    or prosecuted, a testament to the ongoing lawlessness in Russia and your
    failure to reform the country's weak and politicised criminal justice
    system," it said.

    JOURNALISTS MURDERED IN RUSSIA

    Paul Klebnikov, editor of 'Forbes' magazine (Russian edition)

    Age: 41

    Died: 9 July 2004

    Gunned down from passing car while leaving office in Moscow. Had exposed
    workings of the country's shadowy billionaires

    Aleksei Sidorov, editor-in-chief of 'Tolyatinskoye Obozreniye'

    Age: 31

    Died: 9 October 2003

    Stabbed several times in the chest by unidentified assailant outside home.
    Newspaper known for investigative reporting on organised crime, government
    corruption and shady corporate deals

    Valery Ivanov, editor-in-chief of 'Tolyatinskoye Obozreniye'

    Age: 32

    Died: 29 April 2002

    Shot eight times in head at point-blank range by assassin using a pistol
    with a silencer. Murdered in Togliatti after paper exposed controversial
    business deals linked to organised crime and government corruption

    Natalya Skryl, business reporter, 'Nashe Vremya'

    Age: 29

    Died: 9 March 2002

    The reporter was repeatedly struck on the head while returning home in
    Rostov-on-Don late at night. She was investigating a struggle for the
    control of Tagmet, a local metallurgical plant. Just before her death, Ms
    Skryl told colleagues that she had obtained sensitive information about
    the story and was planning to publish it

    Eduard Markevich, editor and publisher of 'Novy Reft'

    Age: 29

    Died: 18 September 2001

    Shot in the back. The paper, in the Sverdlovsk region, often criticised
    local officials. Mr Markevich received threatening calls before the fatal
    attack

    Igor Domnikov, reporter and special projects editor of 'Novaya Gazeta'

    Age: 42

    Died: 16 July 2000

    Died in Moscow two months after being attacked by an unidentified
    assailant and left lying in pool of blood in the entryway of his apartment
    building. His colleagues and police were initially certain the attack was
    related to his professional activity or that of the newspaper. It was also
    believed for a while that the assailant mistook Mr Domnikov for a Novaya
    Gazeta investigative reporter, Oleg Sultanov, who lived in the same
    building. Mr Sultanov claimed to have received threats from the Federal
    Security Service for reporting on corruption in the Russian oil industry

    Natalya Skryl, business reporter, 'Nashe Vremya'

    Age: 29

    Died: 9 March 2002

    The reporter was repeatedly struck on the head while returning home in
    Rostov-on-Don late at night. She was investigating a struggle for the
    control of Tagmet, a local metallurgical plant. Just before her death, Ms
    Skryl told colleagues that she had obtained sensitive information about
    the story and was planning to publish it

    Eduard Markevich, editor and publisher of 'Novy Reft'

    Age: 29

    Died: 18 September 2001

    Shot in the back. The paper, in the Sverdlovsk region, often criticised
    local officials. Mr Markevich received threatening calls before the fatal
    attack

    Igor Domnikov, reporter and special projects editor of 'Novaya Gazeta'

    Age: 42

    Died: 16 July 2000

    Died in Moscow two months after being attacked by an unidentified
    assailant and left lying in pool of blood in the entryway of his apartment
    building. His colleagues and police were initially certain the attack was
    related to his professional activity or that of the newspaper. It was also
    believed for a while that the assailant mistook Mr Domnikov for a Novaya
    Gazeta investigative reporter, Oleg Sultanov, who lived in the same
    building. Mr Sultanov claimed to have received threats from the Federal
    Security Service for reporting on corruption in the Russian oil industry
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