22 October 2003
Alert
CPJ concerned over direction of investigation into editor's murder
Incident details
Aleksei Sidorov, Valery Ivanov
editor(s)
killed
(CPJ/IFEX) - In a 21 October 2003 letter to President Vladimir Putin, CPJ expressed its deep concern about the investigation into the 9 October murder of Aleksei Sidorov, editor-in-chief of the independent daily "Tolyattinskoye Obozreniye". The organisation believes that investigators have prematurely determined that the crime was unrelated to Sidorov's journalistic work.
According to local and international press reports, on 9 October, two unidentified assailants stabbed Sidorov several times in the chest late in the evening, while he approached his apartment building in Togliatti, a city on the Volga River 600 miles (960 kilometres) east of the capital, Moscow, in Samara Region. The assailants fled after stabbing Sidorov, and the editor died in his wife's arms after she heard his call for help and came to the building's entrance.
Journalists at "Tolyattinskoye Obozreniye"-a newspaper known for its investigative reporting on organized crime, government corruption, and shady corporate deals in the heavily industrialized city of Togliatti-are convinced that the murder came in retaliation for Sidorov's work.
"All of our investigative work was supervised by Aleksei," a journalist at "Tolyatinskoye Obozreniye" told CPJ. Another journalist at the paper told CPJ that Sidorov had received unspecified threats in retaliation for his work.
Sidorov is the second editor-in-chief of "Tolyattinskoye Obozreniye" to be murdered in the last 18 months. His predecessor, Valery Ivanov, was shot at point-blank range in April 2002 (see IFEX alerts of 2 January 2003, 1 August and 30 April 2002). While Ivanov's murder remains unsolved, journalists at the paper believe that, like Sidorov, Ivanov was killed because of his work and the paper's commitment to investigative reporting.
Government officials initially agreed that Sidorov's murder appeared to be a contract killing in retaliation for his work. But a week after the killing, officials began offering different explanations about the motive for the murder. On 16 October, the local head of the Interior Ministry, Vladimir Shcherbakov, said Sidorov was stabbed after refusing to give a stranger a sip of some vodka he had supposedly been drinking, the independent Moscow daily "Gazeta" reported.
That same day, deputy prosecutor General Vladimir Kolesnikov said that the murder was related to "the journalist's professional activity," the independent Moscow daily "Kommersant" reported. But the next day, he switched his story, calling the murder "an act of hooliganism," the ITAR-TASS news agency reported.
According to local press reports, Samara's Deputy Prosecutor, General Yevgeny Novozhylov, said that an intoxicated welder from one of the local factories, Yevgeni Maininger, stumbled upon Sidorov that evening and murdered him after a brief unspecified argument. Local police detained Maininger on 12 October and charged him with murder on 21 October after he allegedly confessed to the killing.
Journalists at "Tolyattinskoye Obozreniye" say they are sceptical, especially because Maininger misidentified the location where Sidorov had been stabbed outside of his apartment.
The 9 October murder of Sidorov is a tremendous blow to Russia's already abysmal press freedom record. CPJ is extremely concerned that prosecutors, police, and the Federal Security Service (FSB) have concluded prematurely that the crime was unrelated to Sidorov's journalistic work. Contradictory statements from government officials and the ongoing concern of the paper's staff-who are afraid to be quoted, fearing for their personal security-add further doubts regarding the results of the official investigation.
CPJ believes that an exhaustive and transparent investigation into Sidorov's murder is critically important given Russia's reputation as one of the world's most dangerous countries for journalists.