Moscow, 10 June 1998 (RFE/RL) -- Larisa Yudina, an
opposition journalist
and political activist, was murdered last
weekend in Russia's southern autonomous republic of
Kalmykia. No killer
has been found, but Moscow media, some
politicians and human rights organizations allege
that the murder might
have been politically motivated.
The daily Russky Telegraf said in an article published
today that Yudina
"is the last victim of an undeclared war
against journalists."
Yudina, co-chairperson of the local branch of the
pro-reform Yabloko
party, was the editor of Sovetskaya Kalmykia
Segodnya, the republic's only non-government newspaper.
The paper
frequently published materials critical of
Kalmykia's president, millionaire businessman Kirsan
Ilyumzhinov.
According to the media reports, Yudina last week
received a phone call
from an unknown representative of the
republican Agency for Development and Cooperation
(ARIS). The agency
registers companies in Kalmykia's official
offshore zone, to favor investment. The caller asked
for a meeting.
Yudina is said to have left for the meeting Sunday
evening (June 7),
apparently to receive some documents. She
never returned. Her body, boring marks of a violent
attack, was found
the next day.
The general director of ARIS, Aleksei Kucherenko,
told Kommersant Daily
that his agency was recently audited by
security and tax officials, who found "practically
no evidence of
violations."
Kalmykia's Interior ministry said local police had
started a criminal
investigation of the case. Ilyumzhinov's
press-service said that the murder does not appear
to be politically
motivated. But Yudina's colleagues and the
leader of the Yabloko party, Grigory Yavlinsky, called
on Russia's
general prosecutor, Yury Skuratov, to take over
the case from the local authorities.
Skuratov announced that his office had agreed to
Yabloko's request,
after the State Duma backed Yabloko's call.
A special group of prosecutors and investigators from
Russia's security
service and interior ministry left Moscow for
Kalmykia's capital Elista.
The Kremlin said in a statement that President Boris
Yeltsin "shares the
consternation and the concern" caused by
the murder and is closely following the investigation.
Sovietskaya Kalmykia Segodnya, formerly the paper
of the republican
communist youth organization, have long
maintained its editorial independence, despite offers
from the local
authorities to provide financial subsidies in
exchange for support. Moscow's Nezavisimaya Gazeta
reported today that
the paper was currently funded by small
private contributions.
Kommersant Daily said, quoting "Yabloko"
members in Moscow and Elista,
that the situation worsened after the
paper had started publishing reports on the activities
of commercial
firms linked to the republican leadership.
Yudina said in interview showed last night on Russian
television, that
since 1996 her publication was suffering
continual harassment and was forced to print outside
Kalmykia. Yudina
said that for that reason only about 4,000
copies of the paper could have been occasionally printed
and
distributed.
Aleksei Simonov, president of the Fond Zashity Glasnost,
an organization
monitoring violations of media rights in
Russia, has told reporters that his organization last
year prepared a
report on the conflict between Yudina's
newspaper and the Kalmykian authorities, but it receive
only scant
public interests.
After Yudina's murder, the situation may change.
Yavlinsky said at a
press-conference in Moscow that his party
considers Yudina's murder "a sign that solving
political problems via
criminal means is becoming a fact of life" in
Russia and that "federal authorities are unable
to carry out the
democratic functions of a civil society."
10-06-98
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