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Anti-Putin journalist murdered in Moscow
By Patrick Martin
10 October 2006
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The assassination of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya
is an ominous warning to working people and intellectuals in Russia
and throughout the world of the lengths to which the regime headed
by the former KGB agent Vladimir Putin will go to suppress criticism
and political opposition.
Politkovskaya, the best-known journalistic critic of the Putin
government, author of two books exposing the barbarism of the
war in Chechnya, was gunned down in the lobby of her apartment
building in central Moscow. She was 48 years old, and had survived
several previous assassination attempts as well as countless threats.
The murderer, shown by CCTV cameras as a young man wearing
a hooded jacket, approached the journalist as she was leaving
the building and fired three shots into her body and a fourth
into her head, then threw down the weapon, a Makarov 9mm pistol
of the type regularly used by paid hit-men in Russia.
Politkovskaya wrote for the bi-monthly Novaya Gazeta, a bourgeois-democratic
magazine critical of the Putin regime which was partially financed
by billionaire Alexander Lebedev and former Soviet president Mikhail
Gorbachev. She spent most of the last seven years writing investigative
reports on the war in Chechnya, for which she made more than 50
trips to the war zone. She sympathetically interviewed Russian
conscripts, Chechen guerrillas, and civilians trapped in the fighting.
Born in New York to a Russian couple who worked at the Soviet
mission to the United Nations, Politkovskaya is the thirteenth
journalist murdered in Russia since Putin came to power in 2000.
All of these victims had run afoul either of government officials
or powerful economic interests, and nearly all these cases remain
unsolved.
Igor Yakovenko, general secretary of the Russian Union of Journalists,
said, There is no doubt she was killed for her professional
activities. He suggested that the timing of the murderon
Vladimir Putins birthday, and a few days before the birthday
of Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrovwas a gruesome tribute.
Apparently, this was a present for the two leaders,
he said.
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) said Politkovskayas
murder was a shocking outrage that will stun journalists
across the world.
Politkovskaya wrote several books, including, A Dirty War:
A Russian Reporter in Chechnya, A Small Corner of Hell:
Dispatches from Chechnya and Putins Russia, an
exposé of the regimes corruption and attacks on democratic
rights. She was reportedly writing an article about torture in
Chechnya the weekend she was murdered. It was to be published
on Monday, but Novaya Gazeta had not yet received the text.
While evincing sympathy for the suffering of the Chechen people,
and opposing the Russian military occupation, she was also opposed
to the Islamic fundamentalism of such Chechen terrorists as Shamil
Basayev, organizer of the massacre of schoolchildren and teachers
at Beslan in 2004.
One widely quoted passage from her reporting on Chechnya could
apply equally to America in Iraq, or countless other great power
interventions against small nations. The army and police,
nearly 100,000 strong, wander around Chechnya in a state of complete
moral decay, she wrote. And what response could one
expect but more terrorism, and the recruitment of new resistance
fighters?
According to a profile in the British press, Politkovskaya
was repeatedly detained by Russian special forces while reporting
from Chechnya, and several times threatened with rape and murder.
In 2001, she fled to Austria after receiving a particularly pointed
death threat from an army officer. In 2004, while on her way to
cover the siege at Beslan, she was apparently poisoned and nearly
died.
While the Russian prosecutor general Yuri Chaika declared he
would personally lead the investigation into the murder, because
of its particular importance and its wide resonance within
society, it is more than likely that the order for Politovskayas
liquidation came from within the Putin security apparatus, if
not from the presidents own entourage.
The killing is the second assassination of a prominent Muscovite
in less than a month. Andrei Kozlov, a Central Bank official identified
with anti-corruption campaigns that infringed on the interests
of billionaire oligarchs and high government officials, was shot
to death as he left a soccer match in September.
Putin himself has maintained a stony silence about the brutal
killing of his most vocal media critic, a silence which amounts
to moral endorsement of the assassination.
In this, Putin is true to his roots. He served for two decades
in the Stalinist KGB and its post-Soviet successor agency before
being elevated into high office. Accompanying him into the Kremlin
is an entire coterie of former secret policemen, the so-called
soloviki, who combine the repressive brutality of the Stalinist
secret policeresponsible for the mass murder of Trotskyists
and other socialistsand the corruption and avarice of the
new Russian ruling elite.
The murder of Politkovskaya testifies to the nature of the
regime that has arisen from the so-called democratic revolution,
supported and in no small part orchestrated by the US and other
imperialist powers, which replaced the moribund Stalinist regime
with one based on capitalist restorationist policies.
See Also:
Forbes's billionaires
list and the growth of inequality in Russia
[3 April 2006]
The Beslan hostage
tragedy: the lies of the Putin government and its media
[8 September 2004]
The political and
historical issues in Russias assault on Chechnya
[17 January 2000]
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