Posted on 09/19/2014 8:28:12 AM PDT by UMCRevMom@aol.com
The team's cameraman was beaten up and the camera smashed during the attack. The recorded material left in the car had been deleted, the team found after returning from the police station.
According to BBC, Astrakhan authorities have launched an investigation, Russia's Interfax news agency reports.
The team had just left a cafe in the town when at least three aggressive individuals approached our car, confronting and attacking us, says BBC Moscow correspondent Steve Rosenberg. Using physical violence the men grabbed the camera, smashed it on the road, and then escaped with it in a getaway car. During the scuffle the BBC cameraman was knocked to the ground and beaten.
Read also: Four Russian Battalion Groups Remain in Ukraine - NATO Allied Commander
The team is now safe and back in Moscow. Following the attack, the team spent more than four hours being questioned at a local police station.
During that time, the recording equipment left behind in the car was tampered with, our correspondent says. The hard drive of the main computer as well as several memory cards with video material had been wiped clean. Source: http://en.censor.net.ua/n303214 Source: http://en.censor.net.ua/n303214
BBC Team couldn’t find any Russian Servicemen they were all Killed
Not sure why I should care about the BBC - a truly left/progressive/biased media outlet if ever there was one.
18.09.14 13:03
BBC’s Story about Forgotten Death of Russian Soldier in Ukraine
BBC journalist Steven Rosenberg was investigating death of Konstantin Kuzmin and other Russian soldiers, when the BBC team has been attacked, their camera smashed and all memory cards wiped clean.
“Forgotten death of Russian soldier” by Steve Rosenberg is based on the interview with Oksana, a sister of Konstantin Kuzmin.
“He got a telephone call. He said it was from the commander of his army unit, who told him there was going to be an inspection and that everyone had to be back on base,” Oksana recalls.
“He left on 23 July. Three days later my brother called to say he was on the move again. It sounded as if he was frightened of something. ‘I’m off to the south west! South-west Ukraine!’ he said. I thought, perhaps, he meant the border area... “ she added.
“On 8 August we spoke again on the phone. But he was in a rush. He said to our parents ‘Mama, Papa, I love you. Hi to everyone! Kiss my daughter for me ’ Then, when he went to the border, or wherever it was he went, he told us not to call him. He would call us.”
Konstantin was a “kontraktnik”, a professional soldier. Where and how he was killed remains a mystery.
Oksana continued: “On 17 August the military commissar came to my parents and told them my brother had been killed.”
“He said a shell fired from Ukrainian territory had landed on Konstantin’s vehicle. That’s all we knew, until the coffin arrived. The official said my brother had been killed in military exercises on the border with Ukraine,” she said.
“Do you believe the words you are telling me?” Oksana asked the official.
“No,” he replied.
“So why are you saying this?” Oksana inquired.
“They tell us that there is no war, that our soldiers are not involved,” says Oksana now. “So who is responsible for his death? It is the only question which tortures me.”
Russia’s official position remains unchanged: there are no - and there never were any - Russian troops in eastern Ukraine.
Conclusion: there was no Russian invasion, no Russian incursion, no Kremlin-sponsored war.
It is a position that paints Russia as innocent bystander in the conflict. Moscow does now concede that some Russian soldiers have taken up arms across the border, maintaining these individuals have taken time off from the army and are fighting in their holidays.
Yet in recent weeks, there have been persistent reports of Russian servicemen being sent to fight in Ukraine; reports, too, of soldiers’ funerals across Russia.
It is a hugely sensitive subject. We drove on to Astrakhan, 40 miles away, for lunch. When we left the cafe and approached our vehicle, we were confronted and attacked by at least three aggressive individuals. Our cameraman was knocked to the ground and beaten.
The attackers grabbed the BBC camera, smashed it on the road and took it away in their getaway car. We spent more than four hours at the police station being questioned by investigators.
On the way to the airport we discovered that, while we had been at the police station, some of the recording equipment in the car had been tampered with. The hard drive of our main computer and several memory cards had been wiped clean. Fortunately we had uploaded the interview to London earlier in the day.
But why would anyone set out to destroy our material and to silence the sister of a Russian soldier? Oksana is no terrorist, no political opponent of the Russian government.
All she wants to know is the truth about Konstantin’s death - where exactly he died and how - and ensure that the army does not turn its back on her dead brother.
“He loved Russia, he was so patriotic,” Oksana tells me. “I just don’t understand how they can forget a soldier like him. He was killed, he was buried and he was forgotten.” Source: http://en.censor.net.ua/n303220
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