Authorities charged Igor Kuznetsov with inciting people to commit mass disturbances in group chats on Telegram during the September parliamentary elections. If convicted, he could face a hefty prison sentence.
This statement was originally published on cpj.org on 4 October 2021.
Russian authorities should immediately release journalist Igor Kuznetsov and drop all charges against him, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.
On September 16, police in Tomsk, in western Siberia, arrested Kuznetsov, a local freelance correspondent for the independent news outlet RusNews, and searched his home, where they confiscated three phones and a laptop, according to news reports.
Authorities questioned Kuznetsov at the Counter-Extremism Center in Tomsk, charged him with inducing or recruiting people to commit mass disturbances in group chats on the messaging app Telegram, and the Kirovsky District Court in Tomsk ordered him to be detained until November 14, news reports said.
Authorities accuse Kuznetsov and about 10 others of running those chats, which allegedly attempted to organize nationwide protests during Russia’s September 17-19 parliamentary elections, those reports stated. In a statement passed to media outlets by his lawyer, Kuznetsov said he was a member and administrator of those chat groups “exclusively as a journalist as part of an editorial assignment from RusNews, with the aim of obtaining exclusive information to cover protest events.” He denied coordinating any protests.
If convicted of inciting mass disturbances, Kuznetsov could face a fine of up to 700,000 rubles (US$9,650), up to five years of forced labor, or five to ten years in prison under Russia’s criminal code.
“If journalist Igor Kuznetsov has truly committed an offense, then Russian authorities should immediately provide his lawyers with information about the specific actions he allegedly committed or else let him go,” said Gulnoza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator, in New York. “Russian authorities all too often charge journalists with crimes connected to the protests they are covering. This is a crude form of censorship that needs to stop at once.”
On September 29, RusNews reported that Kuznetsov had been transferred from Tomsk to Pre-Trial Detention Center No. 5 in Moscow and placed in a two-week COVID isolation, preventing his lawyer from seeing him.
Investigators accuse Kuznetsov of helping run a network of chat groups titled Chto-Delat’! (What is to be done!), according to media reports. On the day of his arrest, the Investigative Committee of Russia, the country’s main federal investigating authority, released a statement accusing the groups’ alleged founder and at least 10 other people of carrying out “agitational work aimed at organizing mass unrest” during the elections and publishing videos containing “incitements to violent actions.”
An analysis of the chat groups’ content by independent human rights news website OVD-Info concluded that participants aimed to organize non-violent acts of civil disobedience. Experts who spoke to business daily Kommersant alleged that the channel may have been created or infiltrated by Russian security services to entrap activists.
Yulia Kopeikina, a lawyer representing Kuznetsov, told reporters that the charges against Kuznetsov contained no information about any specific statements the journalist is alleged to have made. She said that Kuznetsov had been an administrator of the group because all members were treated as administrators, and he had not written anything in the chat.
CPJ was unable to identify an account in the chat groups that was connected to the journalist.
When CPJ contacted Kopeikina via messaging app for comment, she said that she was no longer representing Kuznetsov, following his transfer to Moscow. CPJ was unable to determine the identity of Kuznetsov’s new lawyer.
RusNews specializes in video coverage of protests, and operates primarily on YouTube, where it has about 168,000 followers. Kuznetsov began working for RusNews as a part-time correspondent in January 2021, the outlet’s editor Sergei Aynbinder told CPJ in a phone interview. His main work involved filming protests in support of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, Aynbinder said, adding that the outlet had contracted Kuznetsov to monitor any events of interest in his region.
A number of the outlet’s journalists, including Kuznetsov, have been arrested while covering demonstrations, according to Aynbinder and previous CPJ reporting.
CPJ emailed the Russian Investigative Committee and Interior Ministry for comment, but did not receive any replies.
Separately, on September 15, police in Moscow briefly detained RusNews journalist Yevgeny Yevsyukov while filming a protest on Red Square calling for Navalny’s release; he was later fined two thousand rubles (US$275) for violating regulations on the holding of demonstrations, according to news reports.