Mother of Russian journalist missing in Ukraine addresses Red Cross for help
The mother of Russian photojournalist, Andrey Stenin, missing in war-torn eastern Ukraine, has addressed the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to help find her son.
Vera Stenina told RT that she addressed the ICRC “because they
are looking for missing relatives. And I had hopes that I will be
helped there.”
“They said that they’ll try to look for him,” the woman
told RT, adding that the Red Cross showed
“understanding” of her problem.
An experienced war photographer, Stenin, who works for the
Rossiya Segodnya news agency (formerly RIA Novosti), disappeared
on August 5 as he was covering the Ukrainian army’s campaign
against the anti-Kiev rebels in the country’s southeastern
Donetsk and Lugansk regions.
Despite over two weeks having passed since his disappearance, the
journalist’s whereabouts still remain unknown.
Last week, an adviser to the Ukrainian interior minister, Anton
Gerashchenko, said that Stenin had been arrested by the Ukrainian
Security Service for “aiding and glorifying terrorism,”
but he then backtracked on the statement.
Vera Stenina has urged Kiev to organize a search mission for the
journalist, or release him if he is being held.
Her son left for Ukraine on May 15 and she last talked to him on
the phone on July 17. During their last conversation, the
journalist said “‘It’s close. I’ll be coming home soon.’ And
I thought that by August 1 he would already be home,” she
remembers.
Vera Stenina and her son didn’t talk much on the phone as she
knew that “people are being tracked via their mobile
phones” in Ukraine.
“God forbid, I only used the internet. I woke up in the morning
and went online – to see if the photos were there, that
everything was alright. That’s how I kept an eye on him, via TV
and internet,” she said.
Stenin’s supervisor at Rossiya Segodnya believes that the missing
journalist is alive and is being held by one of the parties
involved in the Ukrainian conflict.
“We haven’t received any demands and this is scary.
Apparently, there is no single authority in Ukraine. Kiev is
unable to answer our requests because it is not them, but the
Right Sector [radical movement], who hold him,” Aleksandr
Shtol, who heads the photo department at Rossiya Segodnya, told
the Izvestia newspaper.
“There is a second possibility, which I don’t like. He cannot
be presented as he looks bad. They are waiting until he heals to
show him to the public,” he added.
On Wednesday, the Ukrainian interior minister’s advisor,
Gerashchenko, repeated that Kiev has no idea of Stenin’s
whereabouts.
“We have no information about Andrey Stenin. I addressed this
question to the head of the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU)
after this issue gained considerable attention. The SBU does not
have this man,” Gerashchenko stated.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said that it’s doing “everything
possible” to pinpoint the missing journalist’s location.
Ukrainian authorities have assured the Russian side they are also
“working on this issue.”
‘Tape over your camera lenses’
Rossiya Segodnya has kicked off a new campaign, dubbed ‘Tape Over
Your Camera Lenses’, in support of their missing employee. The
news agency has called on all photographers, bloggers,
journalists and those, who are concerned about Stenin’s fate, to
join the action.
The photographers working for Rossiya Segodnya took pictures of
themselves holding cameras in their hands and a sticker with the
#freeAndrew hashtag taped over their lenses.
The images were than posted on social networks to underline that
the detention of photojournalists denies society an objective
picture of the actual events.
#freeAndrew 'Stick down your camera lens' campaign in support of Andrei Stenin http://t.co/wEWac0AktLpic.twitter.com/83ZoPTj8VP
— RIA Novosti (@ria_novosti) August 20, 2014
Stenin’s disappearance is “most certainly an attack on
freedom of speech. In support of all journalists in conflict
zones… we have launched this campaign,” Aleksandr Shtol,
head of the photo department at Rossiya Segodnya, explained.
The intimidation and abduction of journalists in
Ukraine has become a trend since the military campaign began in
the country’s southeast this April.
Staff at such Russian channels as LifeNews TV, Channel One and RT
have been detained and at times brutally interrogated by Ukraine
security services.
Rossiya channel’s Igor Kornelyuk and Anton Voloshin, as well as
Anatoly Klyan, were killed as a result of Kiev troops shelling
rebel forces in June.