Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The relationship between Russian journalists and separatist forces became a subject of controversy. [1] A second wave of deaths began with the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Yevhenii Sakun, a Ukrainian, was the first journalist killed in that phase of the war, a victim of a Russian airstrike on the Kyiv TV Tower on 1 March 2022 ...
In a June 2007 statement, the CPJ said, "A total of 47 journalists have been killed in Russia since 1992, with the vast majority of killings unsolved,". [19] Seventeen of these journalists had been killed "in the line of duty" since 2000: 14 were murdered in retaliation for their journalism, "two died in crossfire; and one was killed while ...
(Reuters) -A Russian war reporter was killed and three were wounded in Ukraine on Saturday in what the defence ministry said was a Ukrainian attack using cluster munitions, prompting outrage from ...
Russian state media framed the deaths as proof the region was increasingly dangerous and required further military intervention. [26] A number of journalists have died on the Russo-Ukrainian War [27] leading to many to call for action to help protect the lives of journalist in major conflict areas such as in Eastern Ukraine. [28]
Russia is demanding the United Nations condemn Kyiv following an alleged drone attack that it claims killed a journalist working for a Russian outlet and injured several others.. Russia’s ...
A man convicted in the 2006 killing of Russian investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya received a presidential pardon after he did a stint fighting in Ukraine, his lawyer said. Sergei ...
A list of journalists (listed chronologically since 1991) containing the names of the mass media workers who became victims of murders or died while in Ukraine.. On 15 August 2017, the President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko assigned the scholarships for the children of journalists who died on duty, in order to support these children and provide them with the social protection they need. [1]
A former Russian detective convicted for his role in orchestrating the 2006 assassination of investigative journalist Anna Polikovskaya has been pardoned by Russian President Vladimir Putin and is ...