About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 77. Chapters: List of journalists killed in Russia, Alexander Litvinenko, Boris Berezovsky, Viktor Suvorov, Anna Politkovskaya, Nashi, Vladimir Bukovsky, Anatoly Marchenko, Moscow Helsinki Group, Fatima Tlisova, Yuri Shchekochikhin, Boris Stomakhin, Valeria Novodvorskaya, Larisa Arap, Mikhail Trepashkin, Galina Starovoytova, Yevgeny Dodolev, Voice of Beslan, Yelena Tregubova, Andrei Nekrasov, Sergei Kovalev, Oleg Kalugin, Vladimir Bobrovsky, Vladimir Voinovich, Gleb Yakunin, Alexandr Podrabinek, 2008 Red Square demonstration, Viktor Popkov, Alexander Tarasov, Yelena Bonner, Artyom Borovik, Alexander Goldfarb, Larisa Bogoraz, Boris Kagarlitsky, Mothers of Beslan, Sofiya Kalistratova, Nadezhda Chaikova, Lidia Yusupova, Boris Abramovich Kuznetsov, Yelena Maglevannaya, Maria Gaidar, Vladimir Pribylovsky, Alena Arshinova, Walking Together, Dina Kaminskaya, Andrey Piontkovsky, Victor Shenderovich, Oborona, Vanguard of Red Youth, Yakov Krotov, Alexander Nikitin, Sergei Kukharenko, Nina Yefimova, Young Russia, Pyotr Dolgorukov, Young Guard of United Russia, Vadim Charushev. Excerpt: The dangers to journalists in Russia have been well known since the early 1990s but concern at the number of unsolved killings soared after Anna Politkovskaya's murder in Moscow on 7 October 2006. While international monitors spoke of several dozen deaths, some sources within Russia talked of over two hundred fatalities. The evidence has since been examined and documented in two reports, published in Russian and English, by international organizations. wide-ranging investigation by the International Federation of Journalists into the deaths of journalists in Russia was published in June 2009. At the same time the IFJ launched an online database which documents over three hundred deaths and disappearances since 1993. Both the report Partial Justice (Russian ...