11 Jan 2018 | Campaigns -- Featured, Russia, Statements

Oyub Titiev
We, members of the Civic Solidarity Platform (CSP), are deeply concerned at reports of the arrest of Oyub Titiev, head of Human Rights Center Memorial’s Grozny office in Chechnya on highly dubious narcotics charges. We call for his immediate and unconditional release and dropping of all charges.
Titiev is highly respected in the international human rights community, as well as in the North Caucasus, where he is part of a small group of brave human rights defenders still working to uncover and document grave ongoing human rights violations. Titiev has led Memorial’s work in Chechnya since the horrific murder of his colleague Natalia Estemirova in 2009. In recent years, he received numerous threats aimed at making him quit human rights work. Now, his life and safety are in jeopardy.
According to reports, Oyub Titiev was brought to the Kurchaloi district police department shortly after his car was stopped and searched near the Khymuk bridge around 10:30 am on Tuesday 9 January. Titiev’s lawyer has been informed that he is being charged with the illegal possession of drugs, reportedly a large amount (180 grams) of marijuana.
Similar trumped-up charges have previously led to several years’ imprisonment for activists and independent journalists in Chechnya. Framing people for drug crimes has become an increasingly frequent tactic used by Chechnya’s authorities to punish and discredit their critics in the eyes of Chechen society.
The Civic Solidarity Platform is a network of more than 90 human rights organizations working across the OSCE region. We consider the suggestion that a highly experienced human rights defender such as 60 year-old Oyub Titiev would travel around Chechnya with any amount of drugs in his car to be absurd, and to be evidence only of the tactics employed by Chechen authorities against principled and hard-working human rights defenders. We believe Chechen authorities are seeking to frame Titiev and close down the extremely important work of Human Rights Center Memorial in the region by means of threats and harassment.
Russia is under an obligation to respect and enable the work of human rights defenders. An important resolution in the UN General Assembly – adopted by consensus on 24 December 2017 – “Calls upon States to take concrete steps to prevent and put an end to arbitrary arrest and detention, including of human rights defenders, and in this regard strongly urges the release of persons detained or imprisoned, in violation of the obligations and commitments of States under international human rights law, for exercising their human rights and fundamental freedoms, such as the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association, including in relation to cooperation with the United Nations or other international mechanisms in the area of human rights”.
The undersigned members of the Civic Solidarity Platform call on Chechen authorities as well as central Russian authorities to immediately release Oyub Titiev and stop his persecution as we believe that he is being punished solely in retaliation for his legitimate and peaceful human rights work. Furthermore, we call on authorities to ensure the safety of Memorial staff in Chechnya. Furthermore, we call on authorities not to hinder but to assist brave individuals such as Titiev in their work to uncover grave human rights violations in the North Caucasus region.
We call on international organizations and foreign governments to follow Titiev’s case closely and to bring our concerns to the attention of the authorities in the Russian Federation. Russia must abide by its international human rights obligations and OSCE commitments.
Signed:
- Advisory Centre on contemporary international practices and their implementation in law ”Human Constanta” (Belarus)
- Albanian Helsinki Committee (Albania)
- Article 19 (United Kingdom)
- Association UMPDL (Ukraine)
- Barys Zvozskau Belarusian Human Rights House (Lithuania)
- Belarusian Helsinki Committee (Belarus)
- Bir Duino (Kyrgyzstan)
- Bulgarian Helsinki Committee (Bulgaria)
- Center for Civil Liberties (Ukraine)
- Center for Participation and Development (Georgia)
- Center for the Development of Democracy and Human Rights (Russia)
- Centre de la Protection Internationale (France)
- Citizens’ Watch (Russia)
- Committee Against Torture (Russia)
- Crude Accountability (USA)
- Freedom Files (Poland/Russia)
- Georgian Centre for Psychosocial and Medical Rehabilitation of Torture Victims-GCRT (Georgia)
- German-Russian Exchange (Germany)
- Helsinki Association Armenia (Armenia)
- Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly-Vanadzor (Armenia)
- Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia (Serbia)
- Helsinki Committee of Armenia (Armenia)
- Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights (Poland)
- Human Rights Center of Azerbaijan (Azerbaijan)
- Human Rights Center “Viasna” (Belarus)
- Human Rights Club (Azerbaijan)
- Human Rights Matter (Germany)
- Human Rights Monitoring Institute (Lithuania)
- IDP Women Association Consent (Georgia)
- Index on Censorship (United Kingdom)
- Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety (Azerbaijan)
- International Partnership for Human Rights (Belgium)
- International Protection Center (Russia)
- Kazakhstan International Bureau for Human Rights and Rule of Law (Kazakhstan)
- Kharkiv Regional Foundation Public Alternative (Ukraine)
- Legal Transformation Center (Belarus)
- Macedonian Helsinki Committee (Macedonia)
- Moscow Helsinki Group (Russia)
- Netherlands Helsinki Committee (Netherlands)
- Norwegian Helsinki Committee (Norway)
- Notabene (Tajikistan)
- OMCT – World Organisation Against Torture (Switzerland)
- Office of Civil Freedoms (Tajikistan)
- Promo LEX Association (Moldova)
- Protection of Rights Without Borders (Armenia)
- Public Association Dignity (Kazakhstan)
- Public Verdict (Russia)
- Regional Center for Strategic Studies (Azerbaijan/Georgia)
- Solidarus (Germany)
- Truth Hounds (Ukraine)
- Women of the Don (Russia)
9 Jan 2018 | Media Freedom, News and features, Russia
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_single_image image=”97381″ img_size=”full” add_caption=”yes”][vc_column_text]Often referred to as the only independent radio station in Russia, Echo Moskvy has for some time been subjected to state pressure, but 2017 was particularly bad with one radio host almost killed, two journalists in exile and several more detained or menaced in the course of their work.
On 23 October, a 48-year-old man broke into Echo Moskvy’s office in the centre of Moscow and stabbed Tatiana Felgengauer, the long-time host and one of the editor-in-chief’s deputies, several times in the neck. Felgengauer was hospitalised in a critical condition and underwent several operations. She has yet to return to work and is still in recovery.
Felgengauer’s attacker, Boris Grits, was sent for a psychiatric evaluation. During an interrogation by police, he said the host had been harassing him for several years using telepathy. However, the efficiency of the attack left some doubt as to whether his madness was real or just a cover for a well-planned assault.
“It’s obvious to me that he was well prepared. He knew when and where to look for me and very confidently disabled the guard at the first security post,” Felgengauer told Mapping Media Freedom. “This man knew what he was doing.”
Earlier in October Felgengauer featured heavily in a defamatory new report entitled Echo of State Department shown on the state-run national TV channel Rossiya-24. The report claimed that Echo Moskvy co-operates with foreign NGOs, whose presence in Russia was significantly cut after the adoption of the law on “foreign agents”.
The report cited a meeting between Felgengauer, another popular host Alexandr Pluschev and the editor-in-chief of Orenburg department Maxim Kurnikov, along with representatives from Reporters Without Borders and the Robert Bosch Stiftung Foundation in September 2017. It also stated that Ekho Moskvy gives airtime to opposition politicians and accused the radio station of “selling information weapons” to the Associated Press, The Wall Street Journal, Sky News and others. This was in relation to the station’s separate news agency that co-operates with Russian and international media organisations. The journalists reacted to the report on Twitter, making fun of the factual errors.
“If you have seen these videos, you would have noticed how outrageously unprofessional they are,” Felgengauer says. “Any person who watches them, even if he or she doesn’t like Echo Moskvy and is a fan of Putin, would not be able to take such badly done work seriously. I’m not taking it seriously either. For me, it was just a reason to laugh.”
But the defamation campaign against the radio station is no joke. Another report was shown on the state-owned First Channel in July. It claimed that Echo Moskvy and other media outlets were financed by the US Congress through the Broadcasting Board of Governors. The state-owned company Gazprom-media, which owns Echo Moskvy, issued an official statement saying this report was false. In March, the pro-Kremlin tabloid Life also claimed that Echo Moskvy was being checked following the suspicion it is a “foreign agent”. The report was denied by the Ministry of Justice.
“In recent years an image of the enemy has been formed very actively: the enemy comes from outside Russia. It’s a classic trick, hundreds of years old,” Felgengauer says. “And even if an enemy is inside the country, he is somehow working for the external enemy, which is why any person who is out of favour is accused of working for the state department.”
Such reports are part of the broader campaign against foreign media that started in 2014 with a law limiting foreign ownership of Russian media and peaked this year, in late November, when Vladimir Putin signed a new law deeming media outlets that receive funding from overseas as foreign agents and restricting their activity in Russia.
Echo Moskvy was also affected by the law on foreign capital. According to new amendments to the media law that came into force in January 2016, foreign shares in Russian media must not exceed 20%. Alexey Vendiktov, the editor-in-chief of Echo Moskvy, said in an interview with Novaya Gazeta that American EM Holding used to hold 15.92% of the company’s shares, which was in line with the law. But in February 2017 Russian media regulator Roskomnadzor apparently found a new interpretation of the law when it asked EM Holding to withdraw all funding from the station.
“According to them, a foreign company cannot be the co-owner of a media outlet in the Russian Federation,” editor-in-chief Alexey Venediktov said in an interview with the RNS agency. In March 2017 the radio station changed its structure to allow a complete withdrawal of EM Holding’s capital. However, this did not halt accusations from the press in September and October that they were working for foreign powers.
“State media’s role is propaganda,” Sergey Buntman, a deputy editor-in-chief of the radio station, told Mapping Media Freedom. “Russia is like a fortress under siege; everybody is against Russia and there are lots of external and internal enemies – that’s how they are creating the atmosphere which is, in my opinion, extremely aggressive and intolerant.”
Many Echo Moskvy journalists experienced this aggression first hand. In April, radio host Olga Bychkova was insulted on air by a guest, the famous Soviet, Ukrainian, Russian and Estonian writer Mikhail Veller, who threw a cup at her while swearing. In May three radical activists of the far-left movement Drugaya Rossiya (Another Russia) at the Open Dialogs forum in St. Petersburg doused Venediktov with whisky for “betraying Russia”. In July in Orenburg, editor-in-chief of local branch Echo Moskvy, Maxim Kurnikov, was assaulted while reporting on a meeting of opposition volunteers. Reporter Alexandr Pluschev was detained on 26 March, and Andrey Poznyakov on 12 June. Both were covering anti-corruption protests in Moscow for Echo Moskvy.
“It’s all connected to the state of media and human rights and the general situation in the country, which deteriorated throughout 2017,” says Buntman. “Since 2013, the pressure on independent media has progressively gotten worse. The situation is clearly not going to become better this year.”
In September 2017, Yulia Latynina, a prominent columnist and contributor to Echo Moskvy and the independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta, fled Russia after several instances of intimidation. “I have left Russia in connection to threats to my life,” the journalist wrote on Twitter on 10 September. The latest incident took place on 3 September next to Latynina’s parents’ house in the village of Peredelkino, southwest of Moscow, when her car was set on fire. In July 2017, her car and her parents’ house had been sprayed with noxious gas. Neither incident has been properly investigated.
“There is no progress in the investigation at all,” Latynina tells Mapping Media Freedom, six months after the attack on her house. “It is especially outrageous because I was not the only one who suffered in this case. The reagent that our house was sprayed with turned out to be not only horribly stinky but also dangerous to health. Since that incident, my mother started having problems with her lungs. My parents, 77 and 79 years-old, as well as five our neighbours, including two elderly people and two children, suffered as well.”
The lack of police response came as no surprise to Latynina. When an attacker poured faeces on her in 2016, an investigator not only declined to open a criminal case due to “absence of the event of a crime”, but was considering opening a criminal case against the columnist for “false denunciation”.
“The false denunciation was that I reported the crime that had never happened,” Latynina says. “However, after some consideration, he decided not to do it.”
Latynina believes that the attacks were orchestrated and covered up by the FSB. “I can’t prove it, so I’ll just say that in my opinion those attacks are connected to the same structures, that control ‘trolls from Olgino’ tied with ‘Kremlin chef’ Evgeny Prigozhin,” says Latynina referring to her publications on the infamous “troll factory” that reportedly used social media networks to spread propaganda and fake news among Russian users and later, during the 2016 US election campaign, among American users too.
Latynina explains the recent rise in violence against journalists as being influenced by the upcoming presidential election in March 2018, when Vladimir Putin will run for the post again.
“First of all, the proximity of the upcoming elections. Secondly, there’s the steady toughening of the regime; it goes from mild to full dictatorship,” Latynina says. “Before 2014, the regime was based on two main factors: oil money and television. There was enough oil money for everybody, and it was considered that television can brainwash the nation. Now there is no money and people tend to stop watching television. Vremya [the main news programme on Channel One ] is watched by 5 million people, whose average age is 65. [Opposition politician Alexey] Navalny’s movie about Dimon [the investigation of prime-minister Dmitry Medvedev’s links to shady charity funds that own luxurious property and yachts] was watched on Youtube by 25 million people.”
After the attack on Felgengauer, another prominent Echo Moskvy host, Ksenia Larina, also left Russia. “I have decided to have Ksenia Larina evacuated,” Venediktov said in an interview to Dozhd TV. “She will leave the country for at least half a year until her security is guaranteed, because the next blow from a knife to someone’s throat could come after Solovyov’s show, and he would be the instigator. I have no other means to protect my journalists.”
Following the attack, Dmitry Muratov, the editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta, said that he planned to arm his journalists, but both Felgengauer and Latynina agree that it would not help.
“The security of journalists can be provided only by one condition: it is the state complying with its own laws,” Latynina says.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”Mapping Media Freedom” use_theme_fonts=”yes”][vc_separator color=”black”][vc_row_inner][vc_column_inner width=”1/4″][vc_icon icon_fontawesome=”fa fa-times-circle” color=”black” background_style=”rounded” size=”xl” align=”right”][/vc_column_inner][vc_column_inner width=”3/4″][vc_column_text]
Since 24 May 2014, Mapping Media Freedom’s team of correspondents and partners have recorded and verified more than 3,700 violations against journalists and media outlets.
Index campaigns to protect journalists and media freedom. You can help us by submitting reports to Mapping Media Freedom.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column_inner][/vc_row_inner][vc_separator color=”black”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”Don’t lose your voice. Stay informed.” use_theme_fonts=”yes”][vc_separator color=”black”][vc_row_inner][vc_column_inner width=”1/2″][vc_column_text]Index on Censorship is a nonprofit that campaigns for and defends free expression worldwide. We publish work by censored writers and artists, promote debate, and monitor threats to free speech. We believe that everyone should be free to express themselves without fear of harm or persecution – no matter what their views.
Join our mailing list (or follow us on Twitter or Facebook) and we’ll send you our weekly newsletter about our activities defending free speech. We won’t share your personal information with anyone outside Index.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column_inner][vc_column_inner width=”1/2″][gravityform id=”20″ title=”false” description=”false” ajax=”false”][/vc_column_inner][/vc_row_inner][vc_separator color=”black”][vc_basic_grid post_type=”post” max_items=”2″ element_width=”12″ grid_id=”vc_gid:1515515222007-25189b3c-742c-7″ taxonomies=”7349″][/vc_column][/vc_row]
9 Jan 2018 | Journalism Toolbox Russian
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”Трудно сохранить полную анонимность в сети, когда все, начиная от рекламных приложений и заканчивая правительственными службами, отслеживают каждый ваш клик в сети. Марк Фрари рассматривает способы, которые могут помочь сохранить безопасность и анонимность во время пользования интернетом.”][vc_row_inner][vc_column_inner][vc_column_text]

Don Hankins/Flickr
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Обезопась своё подключение
Пользователи в странах, где сеть регулируется жёсткой цензурой, а за трафиком внимательно следят, знают, что использование личных виртуальных сетей или VPN (Virtual Private Network) – необходимо для сохранения анонимности.
VPN как занавески на окнах: люди знают, что вы в сети, но чем вы занимаетесь, им неизвестно.
Такого результата можно достичь путем создания кодированного туннеля в личном веб-хосте, зачастую в другой стране, через который проходят ваши данные. Этот способ обезопасит ваш веб-трафик от любопытствующих. Но сам факт того, что вы используете VPN, может вызвать подозрение.
Растёт число VPN, которые гарантируют полностью анонимный доступ и не записывают никакой информации, как, например, ExpressVPN (expressvpn.com) или Anonymiser (anonymizer.com). Но стоит отметить, что в отдельных странах провайдеры блокируют VPN и доступ к ним проблематичен.
Знай своё дело
Сила интернета в тоже время является и его слабостью, особенно если говорить о конфиденциальности. Информация проходит через интернет пакетами данных, каждый из которых идет разными путями между отправителем и адресатом, по пути перескакивая через компьютерные узлы. Это делает сеть неуязвимой для атак, поскольку нет прямого соединения между конечными точками, но в этой ситуации легко определить отправителя. Пакеты содержат IP адреса отправителя и получателя, что является уязвимостью для вашей конфиденциальности.
«Слоенное» распределение потока обеспечивает большую анонимность. Этот метод прячет пакеты передаваемых данных в слои шифрования наподобие слоёв лука.
На каждом веб-узле слой кодировки удаляется и пакет направляется дальше. Преимущество в том, что узлу известна информация только о предыдущем и последующем узле, а не о всей цепи.
Пользование таким распределением не так уж и сложно. Еще в середине 90-х учёные ВМФ в США создали бесплатный браузер TOR (The Onion Routing project), базирующийся на этом принципе.
С помощью TOR (torproject.org) можно безопасно исследовать глубины интернета, но и у него есть свои недостатки. Зарегистрировано много способов, которыми можно использовать недостатки программы. Предполагается, что спецслужбы пользуются ими для мониторинга трафика.
Запутай свои следы
Каждый раз, когда вы посещаете популярный сайт, частички запросов разных уголков сети бережно собираются и отсеиваются в обрывки кодов. Дополнение для браузера Ghostery (ghostery.com) демонстрирует, как это работает. Запуск Ghostery на веб-сайте «The Los Angeles Times» выявил 102 фрагмента кода, предназначенного для отслеживания веб- активности, от таких известных имен как Facebook и Google и до менее известных как Audience Science и Criteo.
Некоторые отслеживания вполне законны, например для персонализации того, что вы видите на сайте или настройки рекламных объявлений, другие же, особенно в странах, где законодательно не регулирует их использование, усиленно считывают информацию о вас.
Проблема в том, что трекеры могут собирать информацию о личных данных по кусочкам, как пазл. Представьте себе, что вы посетили несколько сайтов: почитали веб-статью в запрещённой публикации, затем просмотрели комментарии под неоднозначным обсуждением на форуме.
Посторонний трекер, предназначенный для обслуживания рекламы, может считать ваши действия. И если позже вы посетите другой сайт, например, социальную сеть, которая идентифицирует вас, эти данные могут быть внезапно соединены между собой.
Расширение браузера с открытым исходным кодом, как например Disconnect (disconnect.me) предлагает способ обезоруживания таких трекеров.
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Используй безопасный интернет
Все больше популярных веб-сайтов заставляют посетителей использовать безопасное соединение. Их можно определить по адресам, которые начинаются с https//, а не с http//. Использование https// означает, что страница, которую вы посещаете, будет проходить проверку подлинности и что ваши связи с сайтом шифруются, не допуская так называемой «атаки преступных посредников», хакер работает между двумя людьми, которые уверенны, что они общаются напрямую друг с другом, и искажает их сообщения. Google использует https// как для Gmail, так и для поиска, а также поощряет внедрение этой степени защиты на других сайтах, повышая их рейтинги в списке поиска.
Вместо того, чтобы постоянно напоминать себе об использовании сайтов с https// адресом, некоторые пользователи устанавливают расширение для браузера, созданное Фондом Электронных Рубежей (Electronic Frontier Foundation) и проектом TOR под названием «HTTPSEverywhere» (eff.org/https-everywhere), которое делает это автоматически. Оно доступно для Chrome, Firefox и Opera. Расширение, по мере возможности, заставляет браузер работать с https// версиями сайтов.
Прячь отпечатки
Традиционные методы идентификации в Интернете основываются на таких вещах, как IP– адреса и файлы cookies, но некоторые организации используют гораздо более изощрённые методы, такие как цифровые отпечатки браузера. При посещении веб узла, браузер может обмениваться информацией об уже установленных по умолчанию языке, настройках или шрифтах. Это кажется достаточно безобидным, но каждое сочетание параметров может быть уникальным для вас, узнать, кто вы, но эту комбинацию можно использовано для объединения веб-истории с цифровыми отпечатками вашего браузера. Узнать насколько плохо вы защищены можно посетив сайт panopticlick.eff.org.
Возрастающее число VPN предоставляет пользователям возможность быть полностью анонимными в сети и избежать записи их информации)
Сохранить анонимность можно используя известную настройку браузера Chrome, работающего на Windows 10, и только обычные активированные настройки и диапазоны шрифтов по умолчанию. Отключение JavaScript также поможет, но многие сайты не смогут работать. Кроме того, для обезоруживания трекеров-невидимок можно установить дополнение EFF’s Privacy Badger.
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Марк Фрари – журналист и соавтор «Ты называешь это будущим? Величайшие изобретения, которые придумала научная-фантастика, а наука изобрела»
(«Чикаго Ревью Прес» 2008)
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