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File:Anna Politkovskaya byZelenskaya.jpg | |
Born | (1958-08-30)30 August 1958 New York City, New York, U.S. |
Died | 7 October 2006(2006-10-07) (aged 48) Moscow, Russia |
Occupation | Journalist |
Anna Stepanovna Politkovskaya (Template:Lang-ru) (30 August 1958 – 7 October 2006) was a Russian journalist and human rights activist well known for her opposition to the Chechen conflict and Russian President Putin.
Politkovskaya made her name reporting from Chechnya, where many journalists and humanitarian workers have been kidnapped or killed. She was arrested and subjected to mock execution by Russian military forces there, and she was poisoned on the way to Beslan, but survived and continued her reporting. She authored several books about the Chechen wars, as well as Putin's Russia, and received numerous prestigious international awards for her work.
She was shot dead in the elevator of her apartment building on October 7, 2006.
Early life
Politkovskaya was born Anna Mazepa in New York City in 1958 to Soviet Ukrainian parents, both of whom served as diplomats to the United Nations. She grew up in Moscow and graduated from the Moscow State University Department of Journalism in 1980. She defended a thesis about the poetry of Marina Tsvetaeva. Politkovskaya was a citizen of both the United States of America and the Russian Federation.
Journalistic work
Politkovskaya worked for Izvestia from 1982 to 1993 and as a reporter, editor of emergencies/accidents section, and assistant chief editor of Obshchaya Gazeta led by Yegor Yakovlev (1994-1999). From June 1999 to 2006, she wrote columns for the biweekly Novaya Gazeta. She published several award-winning books about Chechnya, life in Russia, and President Putin's regime, including Putin's Russia.
Reports from Chechnya
Politkovskaya was widely acclaimed for her reporting from Chechnya and won a number of prestigious awards for her work. She frequently visited hospitals and refugee camps in Chechnya to interview the victims. She said about herself that she was not an investigating magistrate but somebody who describes the life of the citizens for those who cannot see it for themselves, because what is shown on television and written about in the overwhelming majority of newspapers is emasculated and doused with ideology.
Her numerous articles critical of the war in Chechnya described abuses committed by Russian military forces, Chechen rebels, and the Russian-backed Chechen administration led by Akhmad Kadyrov and his son Ramzan Kadyrov. Politkovskaya chronicled human rights abuses and policy failures in Chechnya and elsewhere in Russia's North Caucasus in several books on the subject, including A Dirty War: A Russian Reporter in Chechnya and A Small Corner of Hell: Dispatches from Chechnya, which painted a picture of brutal war in which thousands of innocent citizens have been tortured, abducted or killed at the hands of Chechen or federal authorities. One of her last investigations was the alleged mass poisoning of hundreds of Chechen school children by an unknown chemical substance of strong and prolonged action, by which they were incapacitated for many months.
Criticism of Vladimir Putin and FSB
Politkovskaya wrote a book, Putin's Russia: Life in a Failing Democracy, critical of Putin's federal presidency, including his pursuit of the Second Chechen War. In the book, she accused the Russian secret service, FSB, of stifling all civil liberties in order to establish a Soviet-style dictatorship, but admitted " is we who are responsible for Putin's policies...ociety has shown limitless apathy...s the Chekists have become entrenched in power, we have let them see our fear, and thereby have only intensified their urge to treat us like cattle. The KGB respects only the strong. The weak it devours. We of all people ought to know that." She also wrote: "We are hurtling back into a Soviet abyss, into an information vacuum that spells death from our own ignorance. All we have left is the internet, where information is still freely available. For the rest, if you want to go on working as a journalist, it's total servility to Putin. Otherwise, it can be death, the bullet, poison, or trial—whatever our special services, Putin's guard dogs, see fit."
"People often tell me that I am a pessimist, that I don't believe in the strength of the Russian people, that I am obsessive in my opposition to Putin and see nothing beyond that," she opens an essay titled Am I Afraid?, finishing it—and the book—with the words: "If anybody thinks they can take comfort from the 'optimistic' forecast, let them do so. It is certainly the easier way, but it is the death sentence for our grandchildren."
A Russian Diary
In May 2007, Random House published A Russian Diary: A Journalist's Final Account of Life, Corruption, and Death in Putin's Russia, containing extracts from her notebook and other writings, in which she describes the poisoning on the plane to Rostov-on-Don on the way to the Beslan school hostage crisis and the worsening political situation in Russia. Because she was murdered "while translation was being completed, final editing had to go ahead without her help," translator Arch Tait writes in a note. "Who killed Anna and who lay beyond her killer remains unknown," UK Channel 4's main news anchor Jon Snow writes in the foreword to the book's UK edition. "Her murder robbed too many of us of absolutely vital sources of information and contact. Yet it may, ultimately, be seen to have at least helped prepare the way for the unmasking of the dark forces at the heart of Russia's current being. I must confess that I finished reading A Russian Diary feeling that it should be taken up and dropped from the air in vast quantities throughout the length and breadth of Mother Russia, for all her people to read."
Attempted hostage negotiations
She had, on several occasions, been involved in negotiating the release of hostages, including the Moscow theater hostage crisis of 2002 and the Beslan school hostage crisis of 2004.
Relationships with Russian state authorities
In Moscow, she was not invited to press conferences or gatherings that Kremlin officials might attend, in case the organizers were suspected of harboring sympathies toward her. Despite this, many top officials allegedly talked to her when she was writing articles or conducting investigations. According to one of her articles, they did talk to her, "but only when they weren't likely to be observed: outside in crowds, or in houses that they approached by different routes, like spies". She also claimed that the Kremlin tried to block her access to information and discredit her:
- "I will not go into the other joys of the path I have chosen, the poisoning, the arrests, the threats in letters and over the Internet, the telephoned death threats, the weekly summons to the prosecutor general's office to sign statements about practically every article I write (the first question being, 'How and where did you obtain this information?'). Of course I don't like the constant derisive articles about me that appear in other newspapers and on Internet sites presenting me as the madwoman of Moscow. I find it disgusting to live this way. I would like a bit more understanding."
Death threats
While attending a conference on the freedom of press organized by Reporters Without Borders in Vienna in December 2005, Politkovskaya said: "People sometimes pay with their lives for saying aloud what they think. In fact, one can even get killed for giving me information. I am not the only one in danger. I have examples that prove it." She often received death threats as a result of her work, including being threatened with rape and experiencing a mock execution after being arrested by the military in Chechnya.
Detention in Chechnya
During a reporting trip in 2001, Politkovskaya was detained by military officials in the Chechen village of Khottuni. Politkovskaya followed the complaints from 90 Chechen families about "punitive raids" by federal forces. She interviewed a Chechen grandmother Rosita from a village of Tovzeni who endured 12 days of beatings, electric shock and confinement in a pit. The men who arrested Rosita presented themselves as FSB employees. The torturers requested a ransom from Rosita's relatives who negotiated a smaller amount that they were able to pay. Another interviewee described killings and rapes of Chechen men in a "concentration camp with a commercial streak" near the village of Khottuni.
Upon leaving the camp, Politkovskaya was detained, interrogated, beaten and humiliated by Russian troops. "...the young officers tortured me, skillfully hitting my sore spots. They looked through my children pictures, making a point of saying what they would like to do to the kids. This went on for about three hours." She was subjected to a mock execution using a multiple-launch rocket system BM-21 Grad, then poisoned with a cup of tea that made her vomit. Her tape records were confiscated. She described her mock execution:
- "A lieutenant colonel with a swarthy face and dull dark bulging eyes said in a businesslike tone: 'Let's go. I'm going to shoot you.' He led me out of the tent into complete darkness. The nights here are impenetrable. After we walked for a while, he said, 'Ready or not, here I come.' Something burst with pulsating fire around me, screeching, roaring, and growling. The lieutenant colonel was very happy when I crouched in fright. It turned out that he had led me right under the "Grad" rocket launcher at the moment it was fired."
After the mock execution, the Russian lieutenant colonel said to her: "Here's the banya. Take off your clothes." Seeing that his words had no effect, he got very angry: "A real lieutenant colonel is courting you, and you say no, you militant bitch."
In 2006, Colonel-General Alexander Baranov, the commander of the Russian Kavkaz deployment mentioned by Politkovskaya's camp guide as the one who ordered captured militants to be kept in the pits, was found guilty by the European Court of Human Rights, with regard to unlawful detention, violating the right to life, and the forced disappearance of a Chechen militant suspect, Khadzhi-Murat Yandiyev, he ordered to be executed.
Poisoning
While traveling to Beslan to help in negotiations with the hostage takers, Politkovskaya fell violently ill and lost consciousness after drinking tea. She had been reportedly poisoned, with some accusing the former Soviet secret police poison facility.
Threats from OMON officer
In 2001, Politkovskaya fled to Vienna, following e-mail threats claiming that the OMON police officer whom she had accused of committing atrocities against civilians was looking to take revenge. The officer, Sergei Lapin, was arrested and charged in 2002, but the case against him was closed the following year. In 2005, Lapin was convicted and jailed for torturing and disappearing a Chechen civilian detainee, the case exposed by Anna Politkovskaya in the article "Disappearing People".
Conflict with Ramzan Kadyrov
In 2004, Politkovskaya had a conversation with Chechnya's Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov in Chechnya. One of his assistants said to her: "One had to shoot you in Moscow, right on the street, as used to kill people in your Moscow". Ramzan repeated:"You are the enemy. Shoot...". Novaya Gazeta editor Dmitry Muratov said that on the day of her murder, Politkovskaya had planned to file a lengthy story on torture practices believed to be used by Chechen security detachments known as Kadyrovites. She described Kadyrov as the "Chechen Stalin of our days" in the last interview of her life.
Assassination
Main article: Anna Politkovskaya assassination See also: International reaction to the assassination of Anna PolitkovskayaPolitkovskaya was found shot dead on Saturday, October 7, 2006 in the elevator of her apartment block in central Moscow. She had been shot twice in the head and a third time in the shoulder at point blank range. The funeral was held on Tuesday, October 10, at 2:30 p.m., at the Troyekurovsky Cemetery. Before Politkovskaya was laid to rest, more than 1,000 people filed past her coffin to pay their last respects. Dozens of Politkovskaya's colleagues, public figures and admirers of her work gathered at a cemetery on the outskirts of Moscow for the funeral. No high-ranking Russian officials could be seen at the ceremony. There was widespread international reaction, and Russian state authorities were accused by some of her colleagues and friends of negligence in doing nothing to prevent her murder or even of actual involvement in her assassination.
Allegations of Putin ordering the murder
Soon after Politkovskaya's death, former Russian state security officer Alexander Litvinenko accused Vladimir Putin of personally ordering the assassination of Politkovskaya and stated that a former presidential candidate, Irina Hakamada, had warned Politkovskaya about the threats to her life emanating from Putin. Litvinenko said that he advised Politkovskaya to escape from Russia immediately. Hakamada denied involvement in passing any information on specific threats and said that she warned Politkovskaya only in general terms more than a year before. It remains unclear if Litvinenko referred to an earlier statement made by Boris Berezovsky, who claimed that former Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Boris Nemtsov received a word from Hakamada that Putin threatened her and like-minded colleagues in person. According to Berezovsky, Putin uttered that Hakamada and her colleagues "will take in the head immediately, literally, not figuratively" if they "open the mouth" about the Russian apartment bombings.
Two weeks after this statement, Litvinenko was poisoned by the radioactive polonium. Two days before his death on November 26, 2006, he decided to write a statement in case he "does not make it". He said: "Name the bastard. Anya Politkovskaya did not do it, so I will, for both of us," according to Alex Goldfarb. He said in his last statement:
- "You may succeed in silencing one man but the howl of protest from around the world will reverberate, Mr Putin, in your ears for the rest of your life. May God forgive you for what you have done, not only to me but to beloved Russia and its people."
On October 10, 2,000 demonstrators called Putin a "murderer" during his visit to Dresden, Germany. Such accusations have been dismissed by Putin. He told reporters in Dresden: "This journalist was indeed a fierce critic of the current authorities in Russia...her impact on Russian political life was only very slight. She was well known in the media community, in human rights circles and in the West, but her influence on political life within Russia was very minimal. and "In my opinion murdering such a person certainly does much greater damage from the authorities’ point of view, authorities that she strongly criticized, than her publications ever did. Moreover, we have reliable, consistent information that many people who are hiding from Russian justice have been harbouring the idea that they will use somebody as a victim to create a wave of anti-Russian sentiment in the world".
Former KGB officer Oleg Gordievsky also believed that the murders of Zelimkhan Yandarbiev, Yuri Shchekochikhin, Politkovskaya, Litvinenko and others mean that FSB has returned to the old KGB practice of political assassinations ordered by the government. Gordievsky was poisoned in 2007, allegedly by a Russian agent.
Politkovskaya was killed on Putin's birthday. Later, in February 2008, historian Yuri Felshtinsky and political scientist Vladimir Pribylovsky noted that none of the official suspects has any personal motives to kill her. This led them to suggest several possible contractors: "the central leadership of the secret service—as a birthday present for Putin" or "Ramzan Kadyrov, also as a birthday present for Putin, in the hopes of receiving a present in return—the presidency of Chechnya (the hope was realized)".
Investigation
The team of investigators was led by Pyotr Garibyan. During the initial period of investigation, no names of suspects were announced or leaked. According to more recent publications, a list of suspects investigated but rejected included OMON officer Lapin and Chechen criminals connected with warlord Movladi Baisarov, who was later killed in Moscow.
Billionaire State Duma deputy Alexander Lebedev, who bought 39 percent of Novaya Gazeta in June 2006 (Mikhail Gorbachev bought 10 percent), posted a reward of 25 million rubles, (equal to €707000 or $1 million as of October 2007), for information leading to those responsible for Politkovskaya's death.
On August 28, 2007, Russia's Prosecutor-General Yury Chaika had a meeting with Putin and FSB director Nikolai Patrushev, during which he made an official announcement that:
- "Our investigation has led us to conclude that only people living abroad could be interested in killing Politkovskaya", and that "orces interested in de-stabilising the country, in stoking crisis...in discrediting the national leadership, provoking external pressure on the country, could be interested in this crime. Anna Politkovskaya knew who ordered her killing. She met him more than once."
Chaika also said that Politkovskaya's killers are probably connected with the murders of deputy Central Bank head Andrei Kozlov and U.S. journalist Paul Khlebnikov.
The person noted by Chaika as organizer of the murder was unequivocally identified in the media as Boris Berezovsky. The statement by Chaika was supported by Andrei Lugovoi, who had been indicted by British court with regard to the Alexander Litvinenko poisoning. Lugovoi said that Berezovsky had organized the murders of Politkovskaya, Alexander Litvinenko, and the attempted murder of Yelena Tregubova. Press freedom advocates have called the timing of the announcement, just three days before Politkovskaya's birthday on August 30, suspicious. Oleg Panfilov of the Center for Journalism in Extreme Situations says that the kremlin is trying to preempt the inevitable criticism that would have come if the investigation lasted a whole year without yielding results. He says: "I think that Chaika is trying to preserve Putin's image."
On April 3, 2008, head of the Investigating Committee of the Persecution Office of Russia Dmitry Dovgy (in an interview before his suspension for allegedly taking bribes) told the press that he was convinced that Politkovskaya's murder was masterminded by Boris Berezovsky. Dovgy said he was convinced that the murder had been carried out by "Boris Berezovsky, through Khozh-Akhmed Nukhayev," and that her death had been "advantageous" for the former Kremlin insider at that particular moment in time.
Dovgy said that the murder was also aimed at undermining confidence in law and order in Russia. "She was such a strong character, in opposition to the authorities. She met with Berezovsky, and, well, they killed her. They didn't believe that we would solve the case so quickly," he said. "The organizers wanted to show that well-known people can be killed here in broad daylight, with the law enforcement agencies seemingly unable to solve such crimes".
Suspects
Ten people were arrested for Politkovskaya's killing. The most notable suspects were acting FSB Lieutenant Colonel Pavel Ryaguzov and an officer from the Department for Fighting Organized Crime (UBOP) Sergei Khadjikurbanov. Ryaguzov was later released, then imprisoned again on an independent charge. On October 17, Pavel Ryaguzov was accused of passing information to the murderers of Politkovskaya about her place of residence. Khadjikurbanov had previously been sentenced to four years in prison in 2004; however, his four-year term was commuted to two years, and he was released just a month before the murder of Politkovskaya. Khadjikurbanov is currently at large.
On September 21, Shamil Burayev, former head of Achkhoy-Martanovsky District in Chechnya, was arraigned on charges of aiding the murder of Politkovskaya. According to his lawyer, the accusation was that "upon his request Ryaguzov found the home address of Anna Politkovskaya", whereupon the address was transferred to "unidentified people". Burayev pleaded not guilty. According to an unnamed source, cited by Komsomolskaya Pravda journalist Shamil Jemakulov, Burayev is considered to be the organiser of Politkovskaya's murder.
Statement by colleagues and son of Politkovskaya
Staff journalists of Novaya Gazeta carried out a separate investigation of Politkovskaya's murder, during which they closely cooperated with the General Prosecutor's Office.
On August 30, 2007, Novaya Gazeta journalists and Anna's son Ilya Politkovsky issued a statement about the ongoing investigation. In it they claimed that not all the people involved had been arrested, the Prosecutor's Office had yet to do lots of routine work to prove the guilt of those arrested, but also that Novaya Gazeta's own investigation shows that "the arrested people were really involved in this crime in this or that degree".
The major issue addressed by the Novaya Gazeta journalists was the leak organized in the media, which has seriously complicated the work of investigators and could have let other people involved get off. According to the journalists, "It seems that someone wanted to make the current list of suspects final and, in addition, to prevent the solving of other crimes that might possibly have been committed by the people arrested."
Details of the investigation were kept secret for almost ten months, being controlled by the chief of the official investigative group and Novaya Gazeta journalists. On August 27, the Prosecutor General and special service officers held press conferences. Although this was not a major breach in the secrecy of the case (besides one of the arrested, FSB Lieutenant Colonel Pavel Ryaguzov, being named), it triggered a snowball of publications, as well as public appearances by minor officials. Two things had worsened the deal: first, as Sergey Sokolov has mentioned in his September 2 interview, "each office had people who had obtained a bit of information — and they started to sell it to journalists"; and second, the seeming involvement of some people in these structures, due to "interpenetration of crime and law enforcement bodies", internal intrigues and fear that if investigators "unraveled this tangle, then the details of many celebrated unsolved cases would be disclosed".
With regard to whoever ordered the murder of Politkovskaya, the Novaya Gazeta journalists have noted: "We do not exclude possible involvement by 'runaway oligarchs' and other characters. There are several versions of who was the client in Politkovskaya's murder. We believe that the client hasn't left Russia. None of the versions have been proved with evidence up to now and so all speculation must end for the moment."
Awards
- 2001: Prize of the Russian Union of Journalists
- 2001: Amnesty International Global Award for Human Rights Journalism
- 2002: PEN American Center Freedom to Write Award
- 2002: International Women's Media Foundation Courage in Journalism Award
- 2003: Lettre Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage
- 2003: Hermann Kesten Medal
- 2004: Olof Palme Prize (shared with Lyudmila Alekseyeva and Sergei Kovalev)
- 2005: Prize for the Freedom and Future of the Media
- 2006: International Journalism Award named after Tiziano Terzani
- 2007: UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize (awarded posthumously for the first time)
- 2007: National Press Club/John Aubuchon Freedom of the Press Award (posthumous)
- 2007 Democracy Award to Spotlight Press Freedom by the National Endowment for Democracy,
A documentary about her
Swiss director Eric Bergkraut made a documentary, "Letter to Anna", about her life and death
Bibliography
- Политковская, Анна (2003) Вторая чеченская (Second Chechen )
- Politkovskaya, Anna (2003) A Dirty War: A Russian Reporter in Chechnya
- Politkovskaya, Anna (2003) A Small Corner of Hell: Dispatches from Chechnya, translated by Alexander Burry and Tatiana Tulchinsky, The University of Chicago Press, 2003, ISBN 0-226-67432-0
- Politkovskaya, Anna (2004) Putin's Russia
- Politkovskaya, Anna (2007) A Russian Diary: A Journalist's Final Account of Life, Corruption, and Death in Putin's Russia
References
- World Politics Review LLC,Politkovskaya's Death, Other Killings, Raise Questions About Russian Democracy, 31 Oct 2006
- "Anna Politkovskaya: Putin's Russia". BBC News. Retrieved 2006-10-09.
- 'Independent journalism has been killed in Russia' Becky Smith
- "Her Own Death, Foretold". Politkovskaya, Anna. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
- "Anna Politkovskaya". Lettre Ulysses Award. Retrieved 2006-10-09.
- Naming ceremony for the “Anna Politkovskaya” Press Conference Room, an announcement of European Parliament
- "Anna Politkovskaya". Lettre Ulysses Award. Retrieved 2006-10-09.
- Danilova, Maria (2006-10-09). "Officials: Russian Journalist Found Dead". AP.
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(help) - "Her Own Death, Foretold". Politkovskaya, Anna. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
- What made Chechen schoolchildren ill? - The Jamestown Foundation, March 30 2006
- Poisoned by Putin Guardian Unlimited, September 9, 2004
- Short biography from the 2003 Lettre Ulysses Award
- Last article by Anna Politkovskaya
- Obituaries: Anna Politkovskaya, The Times, 9 October 2006
- "Russia's Secret Heroes", an excerpt from A Small Corner of Hell: Dispatches from Chechnya.
- "Disquiet On The Chechen Front", TIMEeurope Heroes 2003
- Video - on the documenting the Chechen war as Russian journalist, PBS' Democracy on Deadline
- Anna Politkovskaya, I tried and failed, The Guardian, October 30 2002
- "Murder in Moscow: The shooting of Anna Politkovskaya". The Independent. 2006-10-08. Retrieved 2007-05-19.
- "Her Own Death, Foretold". Politkovskaya, Anna. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
- "Her Own Death, Foretold". Politkovskaya, Anna. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
- "Her Own Death, Foretold". Politkovskaya, Anna. Retrieved 2006-10-15.
- "Trois journalistes tués le jour de l'inauguration à Bayeux du Mémorial des reporters'" (in French). Reporters Without Borders. 2006-10-07. Retrieved 2006-10-09.
- Meek, James (2004-10-15). "Dispatches from a savage war". The Guardian. Retrieved 2006-10-09.
- Her Own Death, Foretold October 15 2006
- How the heroes of Russia turned into the tormentors of Chechnya February 27 2001
- Politkovskaya, Anna (2003) A Small Corner of Hell: Dispatches from Chechnya, translated by Alexander Burry and Tatiana Tulchinsky, The University of Chicago Press, 2003, ISBN 0-226-67432-0
- Bazorkina vs. Russia, a judgement by European Court of Human Rights, 27 July 2006.
- "Russian journalist reportedly poisoned en route to hostage negotiations". IFEX. 2004-09-03. Retrieved 2006-10-11.
- Sixsmith, Martin (2007-04-08). "The Laboratory 12 poison plot". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 2007-05-20.
- "Russians remember killed reporter". BBC. 2006-10-08. Retrieved 2006-10-09.
- Danilova, Maria (2006-10-09). "Officials: Russian Journalist Found Dead". AP.
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(help) - Siberian police 'obstructing Politkovskaya murder inquiry' November 6 2006
- Russian: «Тебя надо было расстрелять еще в Москве, на улице, как там у вас в Москве расстреливают… Тебя надо было расстрелять...». Рамзан вторит: «Ты — враг… Расстрелять… Ты — враг…"
- "Politkovskaya Gunned Down".
- Journalist Gives Her Life for Her Profession Oct. 09, 2006
- "Thousands mourn Russian journalist". Reuters. 2006-10-10.
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(help) - Template:Ru icon"Ирина Хакамада о партийном строительстве и экономической ситуации в России". Svoboda News. 4 December 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-07.
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(help) - Live interview with Berezovsky by Evgenia Albats, Radio Echo of Moscow, 11 June 2006. Transcript in Russian, computer translation.
- Alex Goldfarb and Marina Litvinenko. Death of a Dissident: The Poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko and the Return of the KGB. Free Press, New York, 2007. ISBN 978-1416551652, page 328.
- "Putin mit "Mörder, Mörder"-Rufen empfangen" (in German). Die Welt. 2006-10-10. Retrieved 2006-10-11.
- "Putin in Dresden mit "Mörder"-Rufen empfangen" (in German). Der Spiegel. 2006-10-10. Retrieved 2006-10-11.
- "Putin faces 'murderer' taunt as journalist is buried". Telegraph. 2006-10-11. Retrieved 2006-10-11.
- Joint Press Conference with Federal Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel Kremlin, October 10 2006
- Meetings with Representatives of various Communities Kremlin, October 10 2006
- Chechnya: Politkovskaya Mourned As 'Last Hope' October 11, 2006,
- Бывший резидент КГБ Олег Гордиевский не сомневается в причастности к отравлению Литвиненко российских спецслужб - svobodanews.ru
- *Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, The Mitrokhin Archive: The KGB in Europe and the West, Gardners Books (2000), ISBN 0-14-028487-7
- Yuri Felshtinsky and Vladimir Pribylovsky) The Age of Assassins. The Rise and Rise of Vladimir Putin, Gibson Square Books, London, 2008, ISBN 190-614207-6; pages 248-250
- ^ Politkovskaya case: day of open doors. Investigation secrecy divulged just after first arrests of the suspected done by Vyacheslav Izmailov, Dmitry Muratov, Ilya Politkovsky and Sergey Sokolov, Novaya Gazeta, 31.08.2007, "the former mayor of Grozny Bislan Gantamirov came to the Novaya Gazeta office. He said that three groups of killers were acting in Moscow. One of them was hunting after him, the second after Baisarov and the third worked about Politkovskaya."
- 2006 laureate in the “media” category : Novaya Gazeta rsf.org, 2006-12-13, 'the staff holds 51% of the shares, saw two political figures take over 49% of its capital in June 2006. They were ... Mikhail Gorbachev, and Alexander Lebedev'
- Journalist Gives Her Life for Her Profession Kommersant, 2006-10-09, 'Lebedev has declared a 25-million ruble reward'
- Echo of Moscow radio,, 08.10.2006 Template:Ru icon
- Chaika was appointed to his current position by Putin on June 23 2006
- SMH.com, Russia hints exile linked to murder
- ^ Russia: Politkovskaya's Colleagues Dispute Official Investigation, By Brian Whitmore, RFE/RL, August 28 2007
- Berezovsky Masterminded Murders of Politkovskaya, Litvinenko, Tregubova, Lugovoy Said Aug. 29, 2007
- Главный следователь СКП назвал Березовского заказчиком убийства Политковской Lenta.ru 3 April 2007 Template:Ru icon
- Top investigator says Berezovsky ordered Politkovskaya's murder RIA Novosti Retrieved on April 6 2008
- 10 Arrested in Russian Reporter's Death August 27 2007
- Russian murder case has fewer suspects, David Holley, Sergei Loiko, Los Angeles Times, August 31 2007.
- FSB officer arrested on Politkovskaya case, ITAR-TASS, October 17 2007
- ^ Statement by Interfax news agency (in Russian). See also computer translation.
- Assumed organizator of Politkovskaya murder is detained (in Russian) by Shamil Jemakulov, Komsomolskaya Pravda, September 15 2007. See also computer translation
- Interview held by Yevgeniya Albats in September 2 2007
- World Press Freedom Prize 2007
- Death of a Journalist. A new documentary, "Letter to Anna," charts the life and death of the journalist Anna Politkovskaya. It is unlikely to be released in Russia. By Roland Elliott Brown, Moscow Times, May 16, 2008
- Letter to Anna: The Story of Journalist Politkovskaya's Death
- Hot Docs Review: Letter to Anna - The Story of Journalist Politkovskaya's Death
External links
- “The Chronicles of Hell”. Exhibition dedicated to the memory of Anna Politkovskaya by IPVnews
- Book Festival readings, Anna Politkovskaya at the Edinburgh International Book Festival's Audio Recordings and Transcriptions 2004-05 (Russian translated to English, streaming audio)
- Website dedicated to the memory of Anna and reviewing some of her writing
- Czar Putin - Christiane Amanpour of CNN describes an anniversary of both Politkovskaya's death and the birthday of Vladimir Putin from Moscow
- The Writer’s Conscience: Remembering Anna Politkovskaya & Russia’s Forgotten War, December 6, 2006, CUNY Graduate Center, New York City - audio
- 1958 births
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- Assassinated Russian people
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