A Russian journalist who was first reported kidnapped, and then detained by self-defense forces in Artyomovsk, Donetsk region in East Ukraine, was released having spent around 13 hours in captivity.
Novaya Gazeta Russian daily says its employee can finally be
reached by phone after hours of uncertainty concerning his fate.
“Novaya Gazeta’s special correspondent, Pavel Kanygin, has
called the office and is anticipating seeing his colleagues
again,” a statement on Novaya Gazeta’s website says.
Kanygin says he was kidnapped by self-defense activists who beat
him up and took his money.
“We were having dinner at a cafe when five people came in,
five of those self-defense people, and started accusing me,”
Kanygin said, speaking on Dozhd TV channel. “Those were
masked and armed militants, and they said they won’t exchange me,
but will demand a $30,000 ransom.” Kanyagin added that the
kidnappers eventually changed their minds about the ransom.
The press service of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s
Republic gave a different account of what happened to Kanyagin,
though, saying that the journalist was not kidnapped but was
detained for an ID check at a checkpoint in Artyomovsk around
midnight local time.
“He did not have with him accreditation of the Donetsk
People’s Republic,” an employee of the self-proclaimed
republic’s press service told RIA Novosti. “Besides, when he
was searched, materials featuring a negative approach to the
Donetsk People’s Republic were found.”
Earlier in the day, news of the journalist being kidnapped
emerged. A major source was photographer Petr Shelomovsky,
currently working in eastern Ukraine.
“Novaya’s journalist Pavel Kanygin sent me a text message at
4 am saying that he was kidnapped. His phone’s not
responding,” Shelomovsky posted on Facebook. He later added
that Kanygin was detained in Artyomovsk and could later be
transported to Slavyansk, also in the Donetsk region.
#Breaking Russian journalist Pavel Kanygin reported that he was kidnapped in #Artemovsk RT!
— Petr Shelomovskiy (@stopnarcotics) May 12, 2014
A correspondent for Echo of Moscow radio station, Ilya Azar, said
he received the same message from Kanygin, reading: “I was
kidnapped. Call Moscow.”
Azar also said on Twitter that a colleague of Kanygin reportedly
paid a $1,000 ransom for him, but the journalist was not
released, despite promises to do so. His phone is still out of
reach.
Shelomovsky said Kanygin could have been detained by self-defense
forces over things the journalist posted on his Facebook page.
Kanygin was covering the unrest in southeast Ukraine, where Kiev
was conducting a military operation against anti-government
protesters and where the self-rule referendum was held May 11.
There have been a number of journalists detained and abducted in
eastern Ukraine since unrest in the region started in late April.
Correspondents from Russia’s LifeNews media outlet were detained by people allegedly from Ukrainian
security services, and then deported to Russia on April 25.
Simon Ostrovsky, a journalist for New York-based Vice News, was
detained on April 21 by self-defense forces in Slavyansk, and was
freed after spending several days in
detention.
Ukrainian radicals have put a bounty of $10,000 out on RT stringer Graham
Phillips, who is currently working in the east of the country.
Also, a cameraman working for RT in Odessa has been informed
about being on the radicals' radar.
Major Russian media outlets eventually urged international organizations, including
the UN, UNESCO and the OSCE, to help ensure the safety of
journalists covering the Ukraine crisis.