l'observer è la versione domenicale del guardian, il quotidiano di qualità
della sinistra inglese.
Was reporter killed by Putin's secret service?
Antonio Russo, found dead near a Caucasian mountain pass, may have
discovered too much about atrocities in Chechnya
Amelia Gentleman in Moscow and Rory Carroll in Rome
Sunday November 12, 2000
Slumped by the side of the road, a speck amid the fields yawning into the
horizon, there was something odd about the contorted, frozen corpse. Antonio
Russo had been murdered, and his killers made sure they left not a mark, not
a scratch on his body.
On the other side of the Gombori Pass in the republic of Georgia friends
were waiting at the village of Mirzaani. Russo was to join in the
anniversary celebrations of Nico Pirosmani, a nineteenth-century local
artist. They did not know a large, blunt object was being applied to Russo's
chest until four ribs cracked and internal bleeding caused him to die of
shock.
They did not know his satellite telephone, digital camera, laptop computer
and video cassettes were vanishing. An Italian journalist who spent a
lifetime chasing secrets was leaving behind some of his own. Who killed him,
and why?
Snaking from the roadside, 30 miles north east of the Georgian capital,
Tbilisi, is a trail of fact and suspicion that some claim leads to the
Kremlin and its onslaught in Chechnya. Russo's friends believe he was
assassinated by the Russian secret service after discovering unconventional
weapons were being used against children. It would have been a scoop in
keeping with a reporter who risked his life countless times in Africa,
Bosnia and Kosovo.
Employed by the Rome-based Radio Radicale, an affiliate of Italy's Radical
Party, he stayed in Pristina when all other Western journalists pulled out
during Nato's bombing. It brought him an award and fame, but Russo, 40, was
never flashy. Glory he left to others. A shoestring budget and avoiding the
pack was his style.
Last November he moved to Tbilisi. Criss-crossing the mountains into
Chechnya, he befriended the rebel leader, Aslan Maskhadov, who was waging
war against Russian troops. Both sides were committing atrocities.
Last month Russo phoned his mother, Beatrice, a pharmacist in Tuscany. He
had obtained a videotape. Dead children, unimaginable horror, war crimes.
The world would see when he returned to Italy on 18 October.
His body was discovered on 16 October. Nearby was a sheet police suspect was
used to tie him up. Friends found the door to his city centre apartment
unlocked. Belongings were in disarray, documents and car gone. The coroner
said the injuries were almost certainly not the result of a road accident.
It is not known whether his chest was crushed by a rock, a piece of metal or
human pressure.
Mamuka Areshidze, an ex-parliamentary deputy who helped Russo in Georgia,
said he did not know which side might have instigated the murder, but was
convinced it was not simply a criminal attack. He said: 'I think he was
killed because someone wanted to conceal the material he had gathered - this
is why the videos disappeared. I understand security forces know how to
apply pressure to crush people to death without leaving any trace of
violence.'
That is one of several the-ories the murder inquiry is examining, said
police. An environmental organisation in Tbilisi, and colleagues in Rome,
alleged Russo had evidence of a new Russian weapon that killed people
slowly.
There is no proof and sceptics point out higher-profile journalists were
filing reports of atrocities. The Radical Party says the timing was
significant. For a year President Putin had been lobbying the United Nations
to end its status as a non-governmental organisation. He accused the
Radicals of paedophilia, terrorism and drug-trafficking. The final UN vote,
which rejected the request, was scheduled for 18 October.
Breezing through the studios of Radio Radicale is another theory. Russo was
killed because he had a videotaped interview with a Georgian woman claiming
to be the President's mother, refuting his claim she was dead. As a murder
motive that seems fanciful. The story emerged last spring and was followed
up by the international media before being discredited.
Others say the journalist, who on the day of his death was seen with Chechen
acquaintances, was killed for money. 'But why would they have left his
passport and golden crucifix? And why kill him in such a strange way? It
makes no sense,' said a colleague, who asked not to be named.
Human rights groups want the West to query Putin over Russo and two other
journalists who wrote about Chechnya: Alexander Yefremov, killed by a
remote-controlled explosion in the separatist region in May, and Iskander
Khationi, who focused on human rights abuses in Chechnya, found battered to
death in September.
Within hours of the news of Russo's death colleagues in Rome were flooded
messages. The ponytailed activist had made many friends on his travels.
'We never knew the half of it. Stories of him taking 30 kids to a burger
restaurant, saving people's lives,' said a colleague. The liberal,
freethinking Radicals promised neither fame nor decent salary, but Russo
signed up because 'they're crazy, just like me', he used to say.
The party's attacks on Left and Right alike may explain the minimal coverage
in Italy's partisan press. 'They're snobs. It has received more attention
abroad,' said the colleague.
Little fanfare accompanied Russo's burial in the family tomb in Francavilla,
deep in the Abruzzo countryside. Beatrice Russo, 75, believes her son's
killers will never be identified. ' It's all so murky. The only thing that
consoles me is it was a death consistent with his life.'