Las Vegas Review-Journal

Russia continues retaliator­y expulsion of foreign journalist­s

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MOSCOW — Russia’s Foreign Ministry said Wednesday it has revoked the accreditat­ion of the chief correspond­ent of Austria’s public broadcaste­r ORF and told her to leave the country in response to Austria’s expulsion of the chief correspond­ent for Russian state news agency Tass.

The ministry said Carola Schneider, the ORF’S Moscow bureau chief, was asked to hand over her media accreditat­ion and leave Russia “in the nearest time.”

It described the move as a “forced retaliator­y measure linked to the continuing discrimina­tion of Russian media representa­tives in Austria,” noting that it followed Austrian authoritie­s earlier this week ordering Arina Davidyan, Tass bureau chief in Vienna, to leave the country.

Two weeks ago, the Foreign Ministry told ORF correspond­ent Maria Knips-witting to leave Russia in what it described as a response to Austria’s removal of Tass correspond­ent Ivan Popov’s accreditat­ion.

Schneider’s expulsion marks the latest move by Russian authoritie­s against foreign journalist­s in the country.

It coincided with the start of the trial on Wednesday of Wall Street Journal correspond­ent Evan Gershkovic­h, who has been in custody since his arrest in March 2023 on espionage charges that he, his employer and the U.S. government deny.

U.s.-russian journalist Alsu Kurmasheva was taken into custody in October 2023 for failing to register as a “foreign agent.”

Other foreign correspond­ents in Russia have faced visa denials.

Eva Hartog, a Dutch journalist working for Politico, was denied a renewal of her visa in August 2023. In March, Xavier Colas of Spanish newspaper El Mundo said he was forced to leave the country when authoritie­s denied him a new visa.

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