North OssetiaPress

North Caucasus: Police raid offices of Independent Journalist

PRAGUE, 27 February, Caucasus Times- Freelance journalist and editor Alan Tskhurbayev is facing pressure from officials in Russia’s turbulent North Caucasus. Mr Tshurbayev was conducting a meeting for journalists in the North Ossetian capital of Vladikavkaz when police burst into the room and began seizing documents.

Police from the “economic crime section” claimed they had a search warrant and demanded that participants show their papers. The journalists defended Mr. Tskhurbayev as police searched the room, seizing a computer and a number of documents.

Mr. Tskhurbayev, who helps manage an independent journalism network and commissions articles from freelance journalists, is now being accused of working in the North Caucasus illegally, a charge he strongly rejects.

At the time of the raid on February 11, 2008, Mr. Tskhurbayev was collaborating with the Moscow-based Centre for Journalism in Extreme Situations and the London-based Institute for War and Peace Reporting.

Tskhurbayev also works as a reporter for Radio Liberty in the North Caucasus and for the influential Russian news website, gazeta.ru.

IWPR is an international media development organisation supporting free and fair media in areas of crisis and transition, with operations in the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Eurasia. Its Caucasus Reporting Service, published in English and Russian, is a rare and internationally respected source of information and analysis from the North Caucasus, with more than six thousand subscribers

Both organizations are worried about the threats this situation poses to Mr. Tskhurbayev and the implications this has for the already perilous state of independent journalism in the North Caucasus, Europe’s most turbulent region.

“The North Caucasus is practically an information black hole, and good journalism is essential to bring accountable governance and peace to that region. The Russian authorities should cease their continuing harassment of media there,” said Anthony Borden, Executive Director of IWPR

In 2007, Valery Dzutsev, who also helped manage an independent journalism network in the region, was investigated by the police for alleged tax evasion and two of his office computers were seized. The case never came to court and Mr. Dzutsev is currently enrolled in a Fellowship programme in the United States.

Editor

The “Free Eurasia” project is an independent media platform based in Prague, with an ambitious mission to provide the regions of Central Asia and the Caucasus with high-quality, objective and timely information in their national languages. We unite the expertise of editors and journalists working in Tajik, Uzbek, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Circassian, Avar and Russian to break the monopoly of state-run Russian-language media and amplify the voices of local communities. Direction Our work focuses on comprehensive coverage of social, political, economic and cultural developments in Central Asia and the Caucasus, as well as the issues facing diasporas in Russia, Turkey, China and other countries. We produce news, analytical articles, video reports, podcasts, interviews and journalistic investigations. Special attention is paid to topics rarely addressed by state media: human rights violations, corruption, ethnic and cultural identity, migration and international relations. We strive to engage audiences of all ages, with a particular emphasis on young people and residents of remote regions, offering them digital content in their native languages. Goal Our main goal is to promote the development and sustainability of independent media in Central Asia and the Caucasus. We aim to strengthen the region’s informational sovereignty by expanding access to truthful sources and raising media literacy. At the same time, we support the development of national languages as key elements of identity and cultural heritage, encouraging public discussion and engagement. The project seeks to become a catalyst for building a strong civil society and defending democratic values, helping to train new professional journalists and fostering international cooperation.

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