DEATHS OF JOURNALISTS IN RUSSIA

This database includes the violent, premature or unexplained deaths of journalists in Russia recorded by the country's own media monitors since the early 1990s. Each entry (click on View in last column of Search Results) offers a narrative account of the journalist's work and death based mainly on monitoring information gathered in Moscow by the Glasnost Defence Foundation and the Centre for Journalism in Extreme Situations.

Click here to jump to detailed search instructions.

SEARCH CRITERIA

Note: In this version of the database your choice from the above menu lists will not be shown in the Search Criteria fields above after the search has been made. When the database is rebuilt this oversight will be corrected. In the meantime we advise that you note the elements of your Search request before clicking on the Search button.

SEARCH RESULTS

Page 8 of 32, showing 10 records out of 312 total, starting on record 71, ending on 80

Date First Surname Job Incident Federal District + Motive  
13/10/2005 Tamirlan KAZIKHANOV journalist crossfire Nalchik, Kabardino-Balkaria J View
03/09/2005 Vladimir Pashutin chief editor not confirmed Smolensk nJ View
31/08/2005 Alexander PITERSKY journalist homicide Razezhaya St, St Petersburg nJ View
28/07/2005 Magomed VARISOV journalist homicide Makhachkala, Dagestan J View
16/07/2005 Mavlon RADJABOV journalist homicide Moscow nJ View
23/05/2005 Pavel MAKEYEV journalist not confirmed Bataisk, Rostov Region ?J View
05/03/2005 Oksana Zelenko journalist accident Krasnoyarsk Region J View
09/12/2004 Alexei MIKHEYEV journalist accident district, Penza Region J View
27/09/2004 Jan TRAVINSKY journalist homicide Irkutsk nJ View
18/09/2004 Vladimir PRITCHIN chief editor homicide district, Buryatia J View
4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12

About this database

In June 2009, the International Federation of Journalists, which sponsored the creation of this database, published a report entitled Partial Justice: An investigation into the deaths of journalists in Russia, 1993-2009. It is easier to use this database, and to follow the report, if the two sources are consulted together.

This online database has been specially designed to permit quick comparative searches by several criteria at once: for example, the nature of the incident (Incident), the region (Federal District+) where the incident occurred, subsequent actions by the authorities (Impunity), and an assessment of the link between the death and the individual's activities as a journalist (Motive).

1. Searching For An Individual

If you know who you are looking for, type their surname into the Surname box in SEARCH CRITERIA and press Search. Then in the last Actions column of SEARCH RESULTS (above) select View and press Enter.

When you wish to return to the list of the latest deaths, press Search again.

2. Complex Search and Analysis

To identify wider groups of journalists by a variety of criteria (location, type of death, reason for death, job):

  1. Select from one or all of the five drop-down lists in SEARCH CRITERIA (Incident, Federal District +, Job, Motive, Impunity), and
  2. type in, Year of death and M or F in Sex field in order to see how many men and women have died or disappeared under what circumstances.

Once you have made your selection, click on Search. When you wish to return to the full list of the latest deaths, press Search again.

3. Reversing sequence of years

You can start with the earliest years of these records by clicking on the column heading for Date of Death in SEARCH RESULTS. This reverses the chronological sequence.

MOTIVE

The key entry Motive offers an assessment as to whether a particular death was certainly, possibly or probably not linked to the investigations and publications of the journalist in question. If the link is certain this is indicated as J. If it was not linked, this is indicated as nJ. In cases where there is a possibility of a link, but the death has not been officially investigated or that investigation leaves doubts as to the motive, then the death is indicated as ?J.

If the link is considered certain this is indicated as J. If no link is suggested or established this is indicated as nJ. "In cases where there is a possibility of a link but the death has not been officially investigated, or that investigation leaves doubts as to the motive, then the death is indicated as ?J.

By definition, cases where the are given a provisional assessment of nJ or ? when the cause of death is not confirmed (or disputed); the same applies to almost all the cases of missing journalists. Naturally, as investigations proceed and court hearings are held the assessment of motive may be revised.

Also see http://mediaconflictsinrussia.org/about-this-site