Fear Drives a
Reporter Out of Nalchik
By Jim Heintz,
The Associated Press
The Moscow Time, Friday, June 29, 2007. Page 3.
Fatima Tlisova had been beaten, harassed and, she suspects,
poisoned while working as a journalist in Nalchik. But she finally decided
to flee the country the day she sent her 16-year-old son on an errand last
year and he did not come back.
Tlisova later tracked him down at a police station in the
custody of drunken officers who said they had put the boy's name on a list
of suspicious people -- a tactic often used by police in roundups of
suspected Chechen sympathizers.
Sometimes, human rights advocates say, those caught up in
such sweeps are savagely beaten. Sometimes, they vanish forever.
"Do you know what these lists are? These are lists of
broken lives," Tlisova said. "The fact that a drunken policeman can drag an
innocent young man into a police station in broad daylight and put him on
such a list -- I didn't want that to happen to my son."
Tlisova, who worked for The Associated Press in the North
Caucasus region for nearly two years, was speaking Thursday at a U.S.
Congressional Human Rights Caucus roundtable in Washington.
She has moved to the United States to study journalism,
keeping her hand in her profession while getting far from the dangers of
working in her native land.
Tlisova said her son's detention came just one day after
the killing in Moscow of Anna Politkovskaya, a reporter who, like Tlisova,
often had written about civilians being killed, beaten and abused in the
North Caucasus.
Tlisova said her troubles began in 2002, a few days after
writing a story for the newspaper Obshchaya Gazeta documenting soldiers'
abuse of Chechens.
After a party celebrating her 36th birthday, she walked
her friends to the door of her apartment building. After the last guests
departed, a hand grabbed her and she says she was dragged around a corner
and beaten by two large men. She spent several days in intensive care with
broken ribs, a concussion and other injuries.
In 2005, a car with tinted glass pulled up to her on a
Nalchik street and she was told to get inside if she wanted to see her
children again. She said she then was taken to a forest and held there for
three hours.
She said several men dragged her about by her hair and
extinguished cigarettes on her fingertips, telling her they were doing it "so
that you can write better."
Tlisova believed reporting her abduction to the police was
out of the question because she said she recognized her abductors as local
officers of the Federal Security Service.
A few weeks after her son's detention in October 2006,
Tlisova said she came home one night to find signs that her apartment had
been broken into. The next morning, she awoke feeling seriously ill, then
fainted. Hospital tests showed she was suffering acute kidney failure,
although tests 10 days later showed her kidneys functioning normally. She
believes an intruder put poison in her food.
Tlisova stepped up her efforts to find a way to get out of
Russia but fell ill again. As she lay in a hospital, she vowed she would get
out of journalism -- but the decision sat uneasily with her.
Then a woman called her and asked her to come to her
village to investigate the mysterious illnesses afflicting children at a
school there.
"I got this urge, this feeling that I had to go, I had to
find out what happened," she said, and she went to cover the story.
Two months later, she arrived in the United States,
relieved to be in a safer place, but frustrated that she can no longer tell
the world about the violence in her homeland.
Injustices "are happening every day, one cannot be silent
about them," she said.
Some day, she hopes, she will return.
Source:
The
Moscow Time, Friday, June 29, 2007.
Page 3.
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