http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/05/21/018.html

Monday, May 21, 2007. Issue 3660. Page 5. 


7 Radio Journalists Quit Jobs in Protest
By Svetlana Osadchuk 
Staff Writer 
Seven journalists have resigned from Russian News Service after new management 
censored their reports about a Dissenters' March and a dispute with Estonia, 
among other things, several of the journalists said Friday.

Russian News Service -- a leading private broadcast news agency that provides 
news to the country's largest radio station, Russkoye Radio, and other partner 
stations -- is run by general director Alexander Shkolnik and editor Vsevolod 
Neroznak, both of whom joined the agency from Channel One state television.

Reporters started leaving after Shkolnik fired editor Mikhail Baklanov last 
month and replaced him with Neroznak. Deputy editor Maria Makeyeva, who 
anchored morning broadcasts, and Dmitry Mangalov, who anchored the 5 p.m. news, 
left first, followed days later by Anastasia Izyumskaya and Artyom Khan. The 
latest three -- Olga Shipsha, Lyubov Shirizhik and Margarita Bondarenko -- 
tendered their resignations Thursday.

Shipsha declined to discuss her resignation, and Shirizhik and Bondarenko could 
not be reached for comment. But Khan and Izyumskaya said censorship and 
pressure had prompted all seven resignations.

Khan said management had accused him of siding with Estonia in his coverage of 
protests held by the pro-Kremlin Nashi youth group outside the country's Moscow 
embassy in late April and early May. The protests were over Estonia's decision 
to relocate a World War II memorial in Tallinn.

      
Khan also said management had refused to air his reports about a World War II 
monument being relocated in Khimki, a town on Moscow's northern outskirts, and 
an opposition Dissenters' March broken up by riot police in Moscow in April.

"I realized that I would cease to exist as a professional [journalist] if I 
stayed," Khan said by telephone.

Izyumskaya said she felt she was not allowed to prepare balanced reports. "I 
was taught that news can never be good or bad and that all points of view 
should be presented on the air," Izyumskaya wrote in her resignation letter, 
Novaya Gazeta reported May 7. 

"Those who have left were the face of the service and our best professionals," 
Baklanov, the former editor, said by telephone.

Shkolnik blamed the departures on new rules he had introduced to boost the 
professionalism of the editorial staff, Interfax reported. Shkolnik, who 
previously oversaw children's programming at Channel One, also downplayed the 
resignations, saying that only five of the 50 members of the editorial team had 
left on his watch.

Baklanov, who founded the agency in 2000, said he knew of only 25 members on 
the editorial team.

Elsa Vidal, of the media watchdog group Reporters Without Borders, said the 
resignations were a positive sign that journalists were willing to form a 
unified front to resist government pressure.

"It's a desperate turn, but a good turn because the journalists could have 
accepted the new rule and that would've been even more appalling," she said by 
telephone from Paris, where the group is based, The Associated Press reported.

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