Reuters North American News Service, December 16th, 2007
MOSCOW, Dec 16 (Reuters) - Russian authorities expelled a
Moldovan journalist critical of the Kremlin on Sunday in a move
condemned by media watchdogs.
Natalia Morar has written stories alleging how Russia's Dec.
2 parliamentary election was falsified and on the money trail
from Kremlin officials to foreign banks for the small Russian
monthly New Times.
Morar studied and worked in Moscow but was pulled aside as
she returned to the Russian capital's Domodedevo airport from a
press trip with other reporters to Israel and held until she
could be transferred by plane to the Moldovan capital Chisinau.
"This is certainly a response to the investigations of the
magazine as a whole and the work of Natalia Morar, said New
Times deputy editor Yevgenia Albats on radio Echo Moskvy.
According to the magazine, Morar cleared passport control
but was then stopped by customs officials and told she was being
denied entry to the country on the orders of the FSB, Russia's
domestic security service.
"This is an attempt to show that they have the tools to
pressure us," Albats told the radio station, one of the few
outlets in Russia broadcasting news critical of the Kremlin.
The International Federation of Journalists called on the
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe and the
Council of Europe to investigate the case.
"This action is a shocking violation of press freedom and is
clearly a warning to others not to try to expose the dark side
of politics in modern Russia," Aidan White, IFJ General
Secretary, said on Sunday.
The President of the Russian Union of Journalists, Vsevelod
Bogdonov, also condemned Morar's deportation and said his union
would protest over the incident.
(Reporting by Conor Sweeney; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
