CPJ calls on authorities to arrest organizers of attacks on independent journalists in Kazakhstan

An unidentified person set fire to two cars belonging to Roman Yegorov, a camera operator for independent journalist Vadim Boreiko’s YouTube channel Giperborei, on February 20, 2023. Journalists and their family members across Kazakhstan have faced attacks and harassment, in a continued pattern of incidents targeting independent and critical journalists since the fall of 2022. (Screenshot: Giperborei/YouTube)

Stockholm, February 23, 2023 – Kazakh authorities must thoroughly investigate a fresh wave of attacks on independent journalists and ensure that all involved are held to account, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.

In at least four incidents since February 5, journalists and their family members in various cities across Kazakhstan have faced attacks and harassment, in a continued pattern of incidents targeting independent and critical journalists since the fall of 2022.

Kazakh police said in a February 21 statement that they had detained 18 individuals accused of carrying out attacks on six journalists and bloggers, as well as one associated individual, since September. The statement did not mention any individuals who may have ordered those attacks. 

On February 23, Marat Kozhayev, the deputy minister of Internal Affairs, told reporters that “practically all” perpetrators of recent attacks on journalists have been arrested but that it’s “too early to talk” about orders and incentives for the attacks.

“Although the arrest of 18 suspects accused of perpetrating attacks on the press in Kazakhstan is encouraging, the very fact that these attacks are continuing underscores the urgent need to apprehend—and prosecute—those who are organizing and ordering them,” said Carlos Martinez de la Serna, CPJ’s program director, in New York. “Kazakh authorities should know that their reputation is on the line should they fail to conduct a full and convincing investigation into all recent crimes against journalists.”

The four attacks since February 5 were: 

Boreiko told CPJ that the assault on Moldabekov on February 22, the day after the police statement, demonstrated the “sense of impunity” of those behind the attacks. He said he believed law enforcement agencies’ apparent failure to identify those ordering the attacks is a sign they are not truly interested in solving the cases.

CPJ’s email to the Ministry of Internal Affairs did not receive a reply.

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