February 3, 2008 - 10:38 AM
Film portrays murdered Russian journalist
 Image caption: Anna Politkovskaya in a still from a Swiss documentary (Eric 
Bergkraut)

A Swiss film director says the Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya was 
assassinated in Moscow in 2006 for being the bearer of too much bad news.
The late journalist is the main protagonist in Eric Bergkraut's documentary An 
Article Too Many - the Murder of Anna Politkovskaya. The film will be premiered 
at a film festival in the German capital Berlin and is to be aired on Swiss 
public television later this month.

Bergkraut says he was impressed with her uncompromising stance in her work and 
her rigorous self-discipline. He had met Politkovskaya when he made a film 
about the human rights situation in the conflict region of Chechnya.

His latest production is based on interviews mainly with friends of 
Politkovskaya.

swissinfo: Do you know who killed Anna Politkovskaya and who was behind her 
murder?
Eric Bergkraut: The question about who masterminded the killing is interesting, 
and more relevant than asking who the murderers are - obviously contract 
killers.

I don't know who gave the order to kill her. But I'm convinced that the people 
who investigated the crime do know. They cannot reveal names for some reason.

swissinfo: Why did Anna Politkovskaya have to die?
E.B.: I think she was the bearer of too much bad news for the country. It was a 
case of killing the messenger.

 Director Eric Bergkraut   (PD)swissinfo: What was Politkovskaya like?
E.B.: I met Anna four times, but we were not close friends. She was a person 
who considered life from many different angles. I got the impression that she 
worked with painstaking precision and was rigorous with herself. She came 
across as a considerate and nice person.

I don't think I would have been as interested in her if she had been a 
political person. I felt attracted to the apparent contradiction between the 
elegant, beautiful and well-mannered woman and the courage and the 
determination she displayed while seeking the truth.

swissinfo: Was she a person from a different era?
E.B.: Indeed. Mainly because of the way she pursued the truth. Her philosophy 
to help the weak and less fortunate was somewhat old-fashioned.

The same goes for her way to work as a journalist. In Russia as well as in the 
West there is a strong tendency to consider journalism as a kind of service job.

There is no civil society in Russia like in Switzerland. You have to realise 
that to understand what is going on. For decades the Russians have lived under 
authoritarian regimes that did not respect them. Anna had a very western 
attitude about this issue.

swissinfo: Why did you make the film?
E.B.: I would have had no reason to make the documentary without the four hours 
of material from my previous film Coca - the Dove from Chechnya. Anna also 
features in it. Those rushes are the backbone of the new film.

It is largely based on conversations and the idea that you portray a person 
through their friends. It's a case of "show me your friends - and enemies - and 
I'll tell you who you are". A more investigative approach would have been too 
dangerous. It's not my way of working and it would not have been successful.

I approach reality from different directions without blurring the picture. My 
documentary is a political film with a human touch.

swissinfo: Are you confident that your film will be shown in Russia?
E.B.: Coca was shown in 30 different countries except Russia. But at least 
there are copies of it on DVD and on the internet.

In my new film, there are some Russian officials, although only a few. We tried 
to interview President Putin. At least we managed to get the then justice 
minister on record for us in 2004. He told me proudly that Putin was in 
absolute control of the situation in Chechnya. Quite a statement when you 
consider the situation there at the time.

This justice minister by the way moved on to become the general prosecutor who 
was to investigate the murder of Anna Politkovskaya.

swissinfo-interview: Renat Künzi



http://www.swissinfo.org/eng/front/Film_portrays_murdered_Russian_journalist.html?siteSect=105&sid=8695990&cKey=1202031524000&ty=st


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