Russia: Local government harasses Vladivostok radio station for airing reports on corruption

September 3, 1999

His Excellency Boris Yeltsin
President of the Russian Federation
Via Fax: 011 7 095 206 5173; 206 6277

Your Excellency,

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply troubled by a recent series of attacks against correspondents from Radio Lemma in Vladivostok, as well as by efforts on the part of regional and municipal authorities to shut down the popular independent radio station.

The attacks started shortly after Radio Lemma began broadcasting investigative reports about Vostoktranslot, the largest refrigerated shipping line in the region. The attacks began on June 29, when three unidentified men assaulted Yuri Stepanov, a Radio Lemma correspondent, near his apartment building. Stepanov was attacked soon after airing his third interview with the company’s former director, Anatoly Milashevich, who accused the regional governor, Yevgeniy Nazdratenko, of sacking him after he refused to donate $2 million to his campaign fund.

Stepanov was walking home at 10:30 p.m. when he was ambushed by the three individuals, who jumped out of a mini-van and began beating him. After he fell to the ground, one of the men kicked him in the chest and stomach, and tried to drag him into the vehicle. Stepanov managed to escape. He was hospitalized briefly, and spent nearly a month recuperating from injuries that included three broken ribs and a cracked skull.

Local authorities have charged Milashevich himself with mishandling the company’s finances as its manager. Station managers told CPJ that only days before Stepanov’s assault, Vladivostok Mayor Yuriy Kopylev ordered Radio Lemma to stop broadcasting interviews with opponents of the local administration. Valeriy Moravyov, the station’s general director, told CPJ that he believes the attacks are part of an effort to silence Radio Lemma. The station is one of the few independent media in the Primorye region, where fear of retaliation has prompted many media outlets to seek prior approval from local officials before running controversial reports.

The attack on Stepanov is part of a clear pattern of attacks and harassment against Radio Lemma. Other recent incidents include:

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