Shot
Ukraine war: Nobel-winning Russian journalist doused with paint
Nobel peace prize winner and Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov said that he was attacked with paint while travelling on the Moscow-Samara train, the BBC reported. Muratov said that a male attacker shouted “Muratov, this is for our boys,” and threw red paint over him and his belongings.
The incident on Thursday was ostensibly a protest against Muratov’s newspaper Novoya Gazeta – which has been critical of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and had earlier suspended operations on March 28 after receiving a warning from Russian communication regulator Roskomnadzor.
Muratov was quoted as saying, “They poured oil paint with acetone in the compartment. Eyes burn terribly.”
Since the start of the war in Ukraine, it has been widely reported that the Roskomnadzor has cracked down on the media. News organisations have been asked to call the invasion a “special military operation” and have been directed to avoid using words such as “war” and “invasion”. On March 4, Russia passed a new law which punishes anyone spreading “false information” about the Ukraine invasion with up to 15 years of imprisonment.
Also Read
-
Two years on, ‘peace’ in Gaza is at the price of dignity and freedom
-
4 ml of poison, four times a day: Inside the Coldrif tragedy that claimed 17 children
-
Delhi shut its thermal plants, but chokes from neighbouring ones
-
Hafta x South Central feat. Josy Joseph: A crossover episode on the future of media
-
Encroachment menace in Bengaluru locality leaves pavements unusable for pedestrians