Natalia Morar
Natalia Morar (Romanian: Natalia Morari; Russian: Наталья Григорьевна Морарь) (born 12 January 1984, Moldavian SSR) is a Moldovan investigative journalist for the Russian magazine New Times. She was a permanent resident[1] of Russia until she was expelled in December 2007, presumably for exposing corruption in Russia.[1][2] Born in Moldova, she moved to Russia in 2002 to study sociology at the Moscow State University, which she graduated in 2007. Morar applied for Russian citizenship, which she was supposed to get in April 2008,[3] but the citizenship was denied citing national security reasons.[4]
Investigations
In May 2007 Morar broke open the story about a money laundering case involving Austria's Raiffeisen Zentralbank and several top Putin's administration officials, including FSB Deputy Head Alexander Bortnikov.[5] According to her, top Russian Central Bank official Andrei Kozlov had been murdered for pursuing those leads and revoking the license from the implicated Diskont bank.[6]
In mid-December 2007, Morar published an article "The black cash of the Kremlin" in which she described how a vast illegal political fund was used to keep all major political parties in Russia dependent on the central authorities during the 2007 Russian legislative election.
Expulsion from Russia
After her article on political funding, Natalia Morar was hindered to re-enter Russia by the orders of Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation. The International Federation of Journalists called on the European bodies to investigate the case.[7] Russia's Union of Journalists also condemned the deportation.[8] According to Wall Street Journal, she was deported for exposing secrets of the FSB:
"Ms. Morar had written extensively about alleged corruption in Russia's security services, some of which she said had been leaking incriminating information about their rivals in a power struggle between the groups. This fall, she wrote about a corruption investigation into kickback and extortion allegations against some top officials of the FSB federal security service, the successor agency to the KGB."[9]
A number of journalists has spoken out on account of Natalia Morar case. As put by a popular journalist Oleg Kashin in magazine Russian Life:
"Yet a year ago that wasn't the place, and today one can speak about the tendency — movements of unreliable people are not only traced — now law enforcement bodies allow themselves to mess with these movements, deciding without any court statements who can move somewhere, and who should be dealt with... Straight-arrows aren't to bother. At least, straight-arrows themselves are assured in that. They will be sure in that for long — till the very bell in the night when it'll be nobody to call for help. Of course, that sounds much of operetta-style, but the problem really exists and it must be managed."[10]
In February 2008, she married in Moldova a Russian colleague in an attempt to get around the ban, but when she arrived in Moscow, she was not allowed to leave the airport, spending three days in the transit area before returning to Chişinău.[11][12]
In March 2008, Morar announced that she decided to complain to the European Court of Human Rights that several human rights from the European Convention on Human Rights have been violated: that a family (she and her husband) cannot be separated and not being given water and food during the days she stayed at the Domodedovo airport and for not being notified of the reason why she was refused entry the second time.[12]
The refusal of being granted citizenship was officially explained as being a consequence of a law which denies it to people who advocate "forceful change of the constitutional regime" or who create "a threat to the security of the state".[13]
Protests in Moldova
On April 6 (part of the 2009 Moldova civil unrest), Morar and other activists organized a protest in front of the Parliament of Moldova, in relation to the Moldovan parliamentary election, 2009. They did this using social-networking tools such as Twitter.[14] She expected no more than 300 people to show up at the flash mob, but as many as 10,000 came to the protest, including the leaders of the major opposition parties.[15]
The following day, protests escalated into a civil unrest marred with violence. Morar said on her blog that she organized a peaceful protest and she was not responsible for the violence in the protests of the following days.[14] During the protests she urged demonstrators to stop violence.[16]
On April 9, Natalia Morar was officially charged by the Moldovan government with "calls for organizing and staging mass disturbances"[17] and put under house arrest.[18]
On November 11, 2009 all charges were officially dropped against Natalia Morar, who was accused by the previous government of using social networking websites to organize violent street protests in Chișinău in the spring. Chief prosecutor Valeriu Zubco dropped the charges against Morar and three others, including Gabriel Stati, the son of Moldova's richest businessman.
Cultural references
Morar is a subject of an ironic verse by Dmitrii Bykov "И это все устроила Морарь!" (And all those were organized by Morar).[19] The poetry deals with the rumours that Morar single-handedly organized 2009 Moldova civil unrest and if she had been allowed into Russia she would have organized a revolution there. The verse is finished by the words:
Вы ждете утешительной морали? |
You are waiting for a comforting moral? |
References
- 1 2 "New Times Staffer Non-Grata in Russia". Kommersant. December 17, 2007. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
- ↑ Journalist's Expulsion Remains a Mystery, Kommersant, December 18, 2007
- ↑ "Natalia Morar, jurnalista care a infuriat Kremlinul", in România Liberă, 21 December 2008
- ↑ "Morar to Be Held Accountable Under Constitution", Kommersant, August 25, 2008
- ↑ Чиновники уводят деньги на Запад. by Natalya Morar The New Times № 15 May 21, 2007 г.English translation
- ↑ Австрийская полиция может возбудить дело против ключевых чиновников Кремля, утверждает New Times NEWSru.com May 23, 2007.
- ↑ Russia expels journalist critical of Kremlin, Reuters, Sun Dec 16, 12:32 PM ET. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ Journalists condemn Russian expulsion, The Financial Times, Dec. 16, 2007. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ Russia Blocks Re-Entry Of Opposition Journalist Wall Street Journal, December 17, 2007. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ http://www.rulife.ru/index.php?mode=article&artID=439
- ↑ Peter Leonard, Banned Reporter Stuck at Moscow Airport, Associated Press, February 29, 2008. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- 1 2 "Moldovan journalist to complain to European Court of Human Rights about being refused entry", Reporters Without Borders, 12 March 2008. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ "Morar to Be Held Accountable Under Constitution", Kommersant, August 25, 2008. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- 1 2 "Moldova claims Romania plotted attempted coup", The Guardian, April 9, 2009
- ↑ "Moldova: civil society activists risk arrest", Amnesty International April 8, 2009
- ↑ Youtube video Transcript: Crowd: Down with communists! Morar: Youth! Those who have come after our appeal. Listen, please! There, near the parliament there is one dead body already. Lets not fall to the provocations there. There blood of the people flow, lets not fall to the provocations. We are asking you to act peacefully...
- ↑ "Moldova asks Ukraine to extradite businessman Gabriel Stati", Wired, April 9, 2009
- ↑ Наталью Морарь поместили под домашний арест. Lenta.ru (in Russian). 15 April 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
- ↑ Bykov, Dmitrii (15 April 2009). И это все устроила Морарь!. Novaya Gazeta N39 (in Russian). Retrieved 2009-04-19.
External links
- Morari's blog
- All of Morari articles in the New Times (Russian)
- Exile: the price for defying Putin, The Independent, by Shaun Walker, January 19, 2007
- Interview with Natalia Morari by Grigory Pasko
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