Murder of anti-Kremlin war reporter shocks Russians

AFP  |  Moscow 

Russia's embattled liberal community was reeling today from the murder of fiercely anti-who was gunned down in after leaving following a campaign of harassment.

The was killed less than a month after was inaugurated for his fourth term and as gears up to host the Cup later in June.

Babchenko was shot three times in the back, his killing reminiscent of that of another prominent critic, who was gunned down near the Kremlin in February 2015.

Babchenko fought in Russia's two Chechen campaigns in the 1990s and early 2000s before becoming a and author. He repeatedly said he faced death threats.

He contributed to a number of including top and had become an avid blogger, accusing Russian authorities of slaughtering Kremlin critics and unleashing wars in Ukraine, and elsewhere.

His increasingly bombastic posts constantly pushed the boundaries of good taste and some of his colleagues and followers stopped reading him in recent years.

Pro-Kremlin supporters launched a campaign of intimidation and harassment against Babchenko after he wrote on he was not sorry when a plane transporting a Russian military choir crashed into the en route to in December 2016.

Babchenko's murder triggered a huge outpouring of grief among liberal Russians who said he was killed because of his profession. "Arkasha would shoot straight from the hip every day in such a brazen manner that even those close to him felt uneasy sometimes," wrote Pavel Kanygin, a for Novaya Gazeta, referring to his friend by his nickname.

"This is a terror attack against the journalism community both in and The killers attacked all of us by choosing the most sincere, noisy and brave one, the one who is in the public eye."

Another and gay activist wrote on Facebook: "Fucking meat grinder." "He did not mince words," the award-winning publication said in an editorial.

has lost a number of journalists over the past years including Anna Politkovskaya, gunned down in the stairwell of her apartment in 2006.

"The toxic homeland is continuing to kill, poisoning the already outside its borders," wrote Sergei Medvedev, a at

Natalia Gevorkyan, a prominent Russian who now lives in France, said the situation was becoming so bad that the and the should help protect people fleeing persecution in and facing death threats. Babchenko was the second Kremlin living in to be killed in less than two years.

Pavel Sheremet, a dual Russian and Belarusian citizen, died when his car exploded in the city centre in 2016 in still unexplained circumstances. said they suspected the crime was linked to his work.

Babchenko left Russia in February 2017, living first in the Czech Republic, then Israel, before moving to He had hosted a programme on the for the past year.

Vigils in memory of the slain journalist were planned in Russia and today.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 30 2018. 13:35 IST