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Russian Authorities Deny British Journalist Entry Visa

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  • Russian Authorities Deny British Journalist Entry Visa

    RUSSIAN AUTHORITIES DENY BRITISH JOURNALIST ENTRY VISA

    CPJ Press Freedom Online, NY
    Committee to protect journalists
    July 6 2006

    New York, July 5, 2006 --The Committee to Protect Journalists is
    concerned that Russian authorities have refused an entry visa to
    British journalist Thomas de Waal. The Moscow-based Union of Russia's
    Journalists (RUJ) had invited de Waal to present his book on the
    conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, which was translated into Russian last
    year. The Federal Migration Service in Moscow wrote the RUJ Monday
    that de Waal's application had been denied under a 1996 security law.

    De Waal told CPJ that he had not experienced trouble over his work on
    Nagorno-Karabakh--a turbulent province in western Azerbaijan under
    Armenian occupation for a decade. "I believe the entry denial is
    connected to my work on Chechnya and the North Caucasus," de Waal said.

    In the past 12 years, de Waal has written extensively on the war in
    Chechnya. From 1993 to 1997, he worked in Russia, covering the North
    Caucasus for the English-language daily Moscow Times and The Times of
    London. He wrote a book Chechnya: A Small Victorious War, and in 2003,
    he testified as an expert witness for the defense at the extradition
    trial in Britain of Chechen rebel leader Akhmed Zakayev.

    "We are very concerned by Russian authorities' decision to deny Thomas
    de Waal an entry visa," CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon said. "This
    appears to be part of a pattern by the authorities of controlling
    coverage. We call on the Federal Migration Service to allow de Waal
    to enter Russia, and to stop harassing journalists whose reporting
    on the war in Chechnya contradicts the official line."

    De Waal said he believed Russian authorities were now reacting to the
    body of his work over the past decade. "I must have somehow gotten
    on their black list," de Waal said. He last visited Russia in January
    2005. He has been to the North Caucasus twice during President Vladimir
    Putin's tenure, both times visiting the republics of Ingushetia and
    North Ossetia, but not Chechnya.

    Oleg Panfilov, director of the Moscow-based media watchdog Center
    for Journalism in Extreme Situations, said his organization keeps
    a list of foreign journalists denied visas since 2000. The list now
    contains over 30 names, Panfilov told the Russian service of Radio
    Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
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