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http://www.rferl.org/content/politkovskaya-commemoration-flowers-paper-amnesty-international/26624692.html - October 7, 2014

 

RUSSIA - JOURNALIST ANNA POLITKOVSKAYA - 8th ANNIVERSARY OF HER MURDER - COMMEMORATION, FLOWERS, RALLIES

 

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Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2014 5:08 PM

Subject: Russia - 5 Sentenced for Murder of Journalist Anna Politkovskaya

 

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http://www.osce.org/fom/119640

 

RUSSIA - 5 SENTENCED FOR MURDER OF JOURNALIST ANNA POLITKOVSKAYA

VIENNA, 10 June 2014 – OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Dunja Mijatović today welcomed the sentences handed down to five individuals for the murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya in 2006, but called for the investigation to continue to bring the masterminds to justice. “The Politkovskaya case is still not closed until those who ordered this horrific murder are identified and convicted. Anna’s family, friends and colleagues around the world deserve justice”, Mijatović said. On June 9 the Moscow City Court found five individuals, including three defendants acquitted in the previous trial, guilty of planning, participating, and carrying out the murder of Politkovskaya. They received lengthy prison sentences. The court ruling was based on the jury trial verdict which on 22 May found all five suspects guilty. The court also confirmed that Politkovskaya was killed for her critical reporting. However, the investigation was unable to name the masterminds of the crime.

Journalist Anna Politkovskaya was shot and killed in Moscow on 7 October 2006, in her residential building. Politkovskaya was known for her critical views and reports, including on the Chechnya War.

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Sent: Saturday, August 27, 2011 10:01 AM

Subject: Russia - Anna Politkovskaya Slain Rights Journalist - Movie

 

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Film Segment: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYgLF-MnO7s



 

ANNA POLITKOVSKAYA, SLAIN RUSSIAN RIGHTS JOURNALIST - NEW MOVIE

 

 

by Alexandra Marie Daniels



Someone tried to silence Anna Politkovskaya. An investigative journalist with a bleeding heart, she was assassinated on October 7, 2006 at age 48 in her apartment building in Moscow.

 

As expressed in the opening scenes of the new film A Bitter Taste of Freedom, Anna was Russia’s conscience. Despite fear, earlier assassination attempts and arrests, she exposed the wrongdoings of Russian authorities and became a voice for the innocent victims of the Chechen war.

 

Though other films were made about Anna Politkovskaya after her death, A Bitter Taste of Freedom is unique. It is a ‘visual portrait,’ a window into Anna’s life, created by one of her most intimate friends, Russian filmmaker Marina Goldovskaya.

 

As part of the International Documentary Association's 15th Annual DocuWeeks™ Theatrical Documentary Showcase I had the opportunity to sit down with Marina Goldovskaya and discuss their friendship and her new film.

Anna Politkovskaya and her husband Sasha were former students of Goldovskaya at Moscow University and went on to careers in journalism. In 1991 Goldovskaya made the documentary film A Taste of Freedom with the Politkovsky family as her main characters. Through Anna and Sasha she created a visual portrait of Russian life.

 

As a documentary filmmaker Goldovskaya's goal is to preserve history. As a woman experiencing a transformative period in Russian history she did not hesitate to film every possible moment she could.

 

“With Gorbachev,” Goldovskaya explains, “It was euphoric…Freedom was something we didn’t know, and we still know very little about…We thought, this is the beginning of a completely new era…My goal was to make a film to show the changes, where they are going, and I started shooting.”

But Goldovskaya feels that “in order to make a film about a political issue, it has to be very well-grounded in the reality, in life.”

 


At age 48 Anna Politkovskaya was assassinated in Moscow. Her funeral was held on October 10, 2006. Photo courtesy of Goldfilms

 

During the making of A Taste of Freedom, Sasha was often away on assignments and Goldovskaya spent many hours filming conversations with Anna at the Politkovsky home while she raised her two children. A Bitter Taste of Freedom spans their 20-year friendship.

 

Taking time with her words as she takes time with her coffee, Ms. Goldovskaya explains “there are people with very thick skin…There are people with thin skin and there are people without skin…I have a thin skin. I really take things very close to heart…Anna was a person with no skin at all.” Deeply affected by what she saw, Anna’s emotions were raw and it was for this reason that Anna did her work and genuinely did it well.

 

Despite her fear Anna traveled regularly back of forth between Chechnya and Moscow. Ms. Goldovskaya recalls a moment in the film. “I especially loved it when [Anna] says, ‘I go to Chechnya, it’s scary there.’ She was making investigative journalism.”

 

She explains how Anna disguised herself as a Chechen woman by wearing long skirts; how despite poor vision, Anna would remove her glasses because Chechen women did not wear glasses; and how she put a scarf on her head to hide.

 

“She would go there and talk to people in villages, in private homes, and of course she never knew what was going to happen. A couple of times she was arrested by the Federal Russian Guard. She continued to do it, risking her life, it was a part of her.”

 

Anna became a human rights activist defending the innocent civilians whose lives were destroyed. “Shocked and traumatized,” she felt she had no choice but to report on the atrocities of war. The work was dangerous but Anna never looked back.

 

The chief editor of Novaya Gazeta, the newspaper where Anna worked, said many times “stop going, I am afraid for you;” but Anna maintained an attitude of “if not me, then who?”

 

Goldovskaya never accompanied Anna on her trips to Chechnya because Anna felt it was too dangerous. After she was arrested and had spent a number of days in a jail cell, Goldovskaya asked her, “Anya, you are doing such a risky thing...It is so dangerous and she says, ‘Yeah, I know that it is dangerous but let’s not speak about it…what I am doing, this is what I have to do.’”

 

Investigative journalist for Moscow’s liberal Novaya Gazeta, Anna Politkovskaya was often the only spokesperson for the victims of Putin’s government. Photo courtesy of Goldfilms


 

 

 

As a journalist Anna was not able to ignore her responsibility to society. Russian authorities did not like her reporting from Chechnya and there were also colleagues that had very mixed feelings.

 

Dmitry Bykov, a writer interviewed in the film, believed that “her point of view was deeply affected by what she saw,” and commented that “by virtue of her passionate female concern for Chechnya she was losing her objectivity.” Bykov believed that “a woman cannot remain objective in a war due to her feminine nature.”

 

Striking me as absurd, I asked Goldovskaya about Bykov’s comment. She explains “it is a part of Russian patriarchal society, the remnants…an inescapable part of Russian mentality.” She tells me “Anna Politkovskaya made many of her colleagues uncomfortable. Her feminine perspective even disgusted some.”

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Despite the conflicting feelings towards her, Anna followed her raw emotions. She became a voice for the Chechen people - establishing relationships and becoming someone they could trust. In 2002, Politkovskaya was asked to be a negotiator during the Nordost theater siege by armed Chechen rebels. Very sadly, Anna was not able to help. Thirty-nine rebels along with at least 129 hostages were killed when Russian forces pumped toxic gas into the theater to end the raid.

 

Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev describes Anna in the film as “a remarkable journalist…because she was a remarkable person.” He explains that she was strong and ethical and went on to say that “life is always hard for such people…In her heart and in her mind she wanted to see the country improved, for the people to feel…confident. And free.”

 

Anna’s conscience propelled Goldovskaya to make A Bitter Taste of Freedom; and through it, she continues to live. After seeing the documentary and speaking with Marina Goldovskaya I believe we should all ask, “if not me, then who?”

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Sent: Wednesday, July 23, 2008 10:22 AM

Subject: Anna Politkovskaya - Slain Russian Journalist Rights Defender - Movie: "Letter to Anna"

 

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJxyEC31YXM

 

Letter to Anna: Movie

The Story of Slain Russian Journalist Anna Politkovskaya's Death

 

Anna Politkovskaya
Анна Степановна Политковская

 

Born

30 August 1958(1958-08-30)
New York City, New York, U.S.

Died

7 October 2006 (aged 48)
Moscow, Russia

Occupation

Journalist

 

Letter to Anna: Movie - Summary

 

Anna Politkovskaya was a Russian reporter who regularly wrote for Novaya Gazyeta, one of the country's few independent journals. In a nation where political corruption is widespread and exposing the misdeeds of the nation's leaders often has dangerous consequences, Politkovskaya was a fearless voice whose stories demanded responsibility from Vladimir Putin and his colleagues while decrying Russia's actions in Chechnya, which she labeled as genocide. While Politkovskaya writings earned her respect and made her one of the nation's best known journalists, they also angered many powerful people; she nearly died after she was poisoned in 2004 while covering the Beslan school hostage case, and in October 2006 she was shot and killed by an unknown gunman while riding an elevator in her apartment building; many of her friends and family believe she was assassinated by government agents. Filmmaker Eric Bergkraut struck up a friendship with Politkovskaya while making his documentary Coca: The Dove From Chechnya, and Ein Artikel zu viel: Der Mord an Anna Politkowskaja (aka Letter To Anna: The Story Of Journalist Politkovskaya's Death features archival interviews with the late reporter, as well as contributions from colleagues and loved ones who discuss her work and offer their views on her suspicious passing. Letter To Anna received its North American premiere at the 2008 Toronto Hot Docs Film Festival. Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

 

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