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| Influential Russian media groups said they would no longer send journalists to cover the lower house of parliament, the State Duma (AFP Photo/Vasily MAXIMOV) |
Moscow (AFP) - Top Russian media outlets launched a rare boycott of parliament on Thursday after it dismissed claims from several journalists that a senior lawmaker had sexually harassed them.
Influential
media including popular radio station Echo of Moscow, RBC media group and Dozhd
(Rain) independent television said they would no longer send journalists to
cover the lower house of parliament, the State Duma.
Top
opposition newspaper Novaya Gazeta joined the boycott, saying it was pulling
its parliamentary reporter.
The joint
action comes after several reporters for Western and Russian independent media
accused Leonid Slutsky, head of the State Duma's foreign affairs committee, of
making lewd sexual comments and groping.
But on
Wednesday, the parliamentary ethics commission said it had found no violations
in the behaviour of the 50-year-old lawmaker from the nationalist Liberal
Democratic Party.
The
commission questioned the motives of BBC Russian Service journalist Farida
Rustamova, deputy editor at the US-based RTVi Yekaterina Kotrikadze and Dozhd
producer Darya Zhuk, saying their claims had appeared in the run-up to last
Sunday's presidential election.
The
journalists broke their silence on a subject that is still largely taboo in
Russia as the "#MeToo" movement swept across the globe.
The boycott
is a rare campaign of solidarity in a country where all major television
channels are state-controlled.
'Slutsky
must quit'
"Echo
of Moscow now considers the State Duma an unsafe workplace for journalists of
both sexes," chief editor Alexei Venediktov wrote.
The
Vedomosti business daily said it would boycott Slutsky and the ethics
commission's members.
Journalists
have the constitutional right to safety and dignity, it wrote.
"The State Duma should adopt all measures including legislative ones so that such things do not happen within its wall or outside them."
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A woman
holds a placard reading "Hands off female journalists" outside
Russia's
parliament building (AFP Photo/Vasily MAXIMOV)
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"The State Duma should adopt all measures including legislative ones so that such things do not happen within its wall or outside them."
Popular
independent online news site Meduza urged readers to share on social media a
picture of the lawmaker with the words, "I believe that Slutsky must quit
the State Duma".
The Russian
Special Forces newspaper joined the campaign, with editor Alexei Filatov
shaming lawmakers.
Some media
groups such as Kommersant business daily did not pull their parliamentary
correspondents but said they would no longer be asking Slutsky for comments.
Kremlin-friendly
online news portal Lenta said it would ignore Slutsky's existence and delete
all its articles about him except those covering the sexual harassment claims.
'Enemy
media'
According
to an audio recording of the closed-door ethics committee hearing that was
leaked to the press, a lawmaker with the ruling United Russia party, Shamsail
Saraliyev, called the women "enemy media".
"All
the journalists who raised this subject today are journalists of Western media,
I call them enemy media," he was quoted as saying.
President
Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment saying, "This
is not an issue for the presidential administration."
Rustamova,
one of the two female journalists who gave testimony, told AFP she was grateful
for the "solidarity and support" of colleagues.
'Return
to the norm'
Opposition
activists supported the boycott.
"This
is a return to the norm which we are so lacking," former lawmaker and
opposition politician Dmitry Gudkov wrote on Facebook, lamenting that national
TV channels and Russian news agencies "were keeping silent".
"This
is a very important (I'd even say dramatic) story concerning Slutsky," top
opposition leader Alexei Navalny wrote on Twitter.
Slutsky was
largely supported by his colleagues, including Liberal Democratic Party leader
Vladimir Zhirinovsky, who accused the journalists of "receiving orders from
the West".
In 2014,
Zhirinovsky, who often makes highly offensive and misogynist statements, told
his bodyguard to "rape in a rough manner" a pregnant reporter in
comments broadcast on national television.
In Russia's
macho culture, harassment claims are rare.
There is no
law defining sexual harassment and even rape cases often do not make it to
trial, while the punishmnent for domestic violence has recently been reduced.
Putin, who
prides himself on his alpha-male image, was quoted by Kommersant in 2006 as
praising the sexual stamina of then Israeli president Moshe Katsav after he was
accused of multiple rapes.
"What
a powerful guy he turned out to be! Raped 10 women! We all envy him!" Putin
said.


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