World | Russia In Case Pen Is No Mightier, Russian Journos Want Guns Novaya Gazeta's work has earned it a grim legacy of dead reporters By Nick McMaster Posted Jan 26, 2009 4:15 PM CST Copied Larisa Baburova pays last respects to her daughter, Anastasia Baburova, in framed photo, who was shot dead along with human-rights lawyer Stanislav Markelov, in Sevastopol, Ukraine, last week. (AP Photo) The murders of lawyer Stanislav Markelov and reporter Anastasia Baburova last week are only the latest to strike the Novaya Gazeta newspaper, and show just how costly freedom of the press still is in Russia, Der Spiegel reports. Investigative reporters are likely to make so many enemies—from members of the military to corrupt politicians, businessmen, or gangsters—that Gazeta wants to provide its reporters with guns. It seems little else can provide protection: In 2000, thugs confessed that the deputy governor of the central province of Lipetsk hired them to kill Gazeta editor Igor Domnikov. But the governor was called to Domnikov’s murder trial only as a witness, not a suspect—and remains free today, a successful businessman. Read These Next Feds cite ChatGPT evidence in arrest of Palisades Fire suspect. The Treasury isn't backing down from its Trump coin plan. Trump, Johnson aren't happy with pick for Super Bowl headliner. Trump thinks these Illinois officials should be in jail. Report an error