Russia to probe news media coverage of financial crisis

Russian prosecutors are launching inquiries across the country against news media reporting on the financial crisis in a bid to stem growing concern about its impact, Moscow-based business newspaper Kommersant reported on Wednesday.

"It's not censorship. We're just checking how reliable the information is," a press official from the prosecutor general's office was quoted as saying by Agence France-Presse (AFP). The official gave the example of unreliable reports about a bankruptcy causing a run on deposits from a bank in the Far Eastern port of Vladivostok.

More from the AFP report: [Link]

Regional prosecutors have been ordered to check local media "in connection with measures taken by the Russian government to improve the situation in the financial sector and other sectors of the economy," Kommersant said.

Investigators in Sverdlovsk, a key industrial region in the Ural mountains, are checking local media for attempts "to destabilise the situation in the region," a spokeswoman for the local prosecutor's office was quoted as saying. "If we establish that the law has been violated, there could be disciplinary measures against the guilty, including criminal punishment," she said.

 
 
Date Posted: 19 November 2008 Last Modified: 19 November 2008