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Putin Criticised As 15th Journalist Killed

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  • Putin Criticised As 15th Journalist Killed

    The Statesman, India
    July 20 2004

    Putin Criticised As 15th Journalist Killed

    The Times, London
    MOSCOW, July 20. - The voice at the end of the telephone line was
    muffled but menacing. `You should be careful what you write,' the man
    said, without giving his name. `Something could happen to you as you
    walk on the street.' Then the line went dead. The threat, made to The
    Times several weeks ago, was most likely a hoax from one of the
    desperate, disillusioned or mentally disturbed individuals often
    calling foreign reporters' offices here.
    But it seems suddenly chilling after the gangland-style killing of
    Paul Khlebnikov, editor of Forbes magazine's Russian edition, on 9
    July and the murder of Pail Peloyan, an Armenian reporter, at the
    weekend.
    It also emerged last week that a reporter in St Petersburg, Mr Maxim
    Maximov, had been missing since 1 July. The three cases have not only
    sent a chill through a press corps, but have also exposed the dark
    side of President Putin's Russia and raised questions about its
    future direction.
    The UN ranks Russia the world's 57th-best country to live in, but an
    international media watchdog rates it as one of the ten worst places
    to be a journalist - alongside Iraq, Cuba, Zimbabwe and the West
    Bank.
    The US-based Committee to Protect Journalists says that Khlebnikov -
    an American citizen - was the fifteenth journalist to be killed in
    connection with his work in Russia since Mr Putin took power. Many
    human rights groups and reporters accuse Mr Putin of indirectly
    encouraging such attacks through his own crackdown on the independent
    media.
    Mr Putin made clear his personal disdain for reporters at a news
    conference in 2002, when he suggested that a French reporter
    questioning the Chechnya war should come to Moscow to be circumcised
    `so you'll have nothing growing back afterwards'.
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