Woman, 27, is latest victim of attacks on Russian journalists
The Independent – United Kingdom;
Jul 31, 2004
Andrew Osborn in Moscow
NATALIA ROMANOVA, a well-respected financial journalist at the weekly
Russian business magazine Company, had just walked into the stairwell
of her apartment inn Moscow with her day’s shopping when an attacker
struck.
The man waiting for her said nothing, stole nothing and betrayed no
emotion. Instead, he silently administered a savage beating to the
27-year-old reporter, repeatedly punching her in the face and head. He
left her body crumpled on the floor, her face a bloodied mess. She is
still in hospital today.
Police have opened a criminal investigation into Wednesday’s attack,
made public yesterday, but Ms Romanova’s colleagues think they know
why she was beaten so viciously. Her attack, they suspect, is the
latest in a long line of assaults, some of which end in death, on
Russia’s beleaguered journalistic community.
Earlier this month, Paul Klebnikov, the American-born editor of the
Russian edition of Forbes magazine, was murdered and the corpse of an
Armenian journalist, Paul Peloyan, was found dumped on Moscow’s outer
ring road.
Sixteen journalists have lost their lives in dubious circumstances in
Russia since 2000. Police in St Petersburg are currently searching for
Maxim Maximov, an investigative reporter who has been missing for over
a month.
Ms Romanova’s boss and chief editor, Andrei Grigoriev, believes she
was targeted because she wrote something that offended someone in
Russia’s powerful and often shadowy business world.
“In almost every issue, we carry something about business conflicts,
about the struggle for some kind of new market, about a clash of
interests,” he said yesterday. “I’m fairly certain the attack was
linked to her work. It could be simple hooliganism but it seems
unlikely.”
Ms Romanova was holding a purse, keys and an expensive mobile phone
when she was attacked, but nothing was taken.
Mr Grigoriev says it is difficult to say which article might have
triggered the attack but notes that the magazine has covered the
recent banking crisis in Russia a lot and that the sector is “under
real strain”.
“Sometimes you can write something that looks innocent but which has
serious and decisive implications for somebody else. You just never
know.”
Although Mr Grigoriev says Russia’s journalists are not panicking yet,
he says the situation is worrying. “Journalists have been beaten and
killed before, in the 1990s, but it appears to be starting again.”