Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/10/2012

Editor, Kremlin Critic Decry YouTube Video

Fishman
Newsweek.ru

Fishman

Click to view previous image Image 1 of 3 Click to view next image

Russian Newsweek editor Mikhail Fishman and opposition politician Ilya Yashin cried foul Thursday after a video surfaced on YouTube that seemingly shows them giving bribes to traffic police officers.

The traffic police suggested that the officers depicted in the video were actually actors, and Yashin linked the recording to Nashi, the youth group known for hounding people critical of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's policies.

The three-minute video, posted by an anonymous user and titled "Words and Actions,” shows Fishman, Yashin and liberal political analyst Dmitry Oreshkin being asked by someone off-camera to share their opinions about the widespread practice of bribing the traffic police.

Fishman and Oreshkin say they have bribed officers in the past to avoid fines, while Yashin says he prefers “to convince police officers with words."

The video then shows Yashin being stopped by the traffic police and apologizing for speeding. The camera then cuts to a police officer's hand holding 3,000 rubles ($100). An officer is then shown telling Yashin not to give money directly to the police but to pay the fine as required by law.

Similar scenarios are repeated with Fishman and Oreshkin.

Yashin denounced the video as "an ordinary provocation by the security forces."

“I don’t even see any reason to complain to the police because the policeman himself acted as a political provocateur,” he told The Moscow Times.

He said the incident in the video occurred in September when he was stopped by traffic police near his house. He said the officers tried to extort a bribe but he convinced them to back off.

Yashin noted that the video does not show him handing over money and suggested that it had been doctored.

Fishman wrote on his LiveJournal blog that the incident involving him happened a year ago. He said a black Mercedes and a traffic police car had followed him that day, and that during a document check the police had uncovered an outstanding fine.

“I didn’t think about bribing anyone. But the people who placed the footage on the Internet edited it to make it look like I am trying to bribe the policeman,” Fishman said.

He said he would file a complaint with the police.

Oreshkin, a leading liberal pundit, could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Yashin said the video first surfaced on the web site of the pro-Kremlin Nashi youth group and accused it of involvement in the incident.

Nashi spokeswomen Kristina Potupchik denied that the group had any connection to the production of the video and said it had only posted it on its web site because of large public interest.

She said she believed that the video was genuine.

“If they are going to urge others not to give bribes, let them start with themselves. Everyone should see that they are hypocrites,” Potupchik said.

A traffic police spokesman expressed doubt that real officers were depicted in the video. “It could have been just some dressed-up actors. All this looks like some kind of film,” he said.

He said traffic police officers do not carry cameras to videotape traffic violators.





Tags

police YouTube corruption bribery



Also in News

Pro-Putin March Plan For Feb. 23

Supporters of presidential candidate Vladimir Putin plan to hold a march Feb. 23 and expect that 200,000 people will come.

Troubles Pile Up for Embattled Youth Head

A senior Kommersant executive demanded Thursday that the Prosecutor General's Office open a criminal case against officials at the pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi, accusing the organization of being behind an Internet attack on the paper several years ago.

Blog Shows Lavish Chechen Spending

Prominent blogger and anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny on Thursday accused the Chechen Interior Ministry of illegally spending millions of rubles in federal money on expensive cars and other goods.

S. Ossetia Opposition Leader Hospitalized Following Police Raid

South Ossetian opposition leader Alla Dzhioyeva was hospitalized in a coma late Thursday after suffering an apparent stroke during a raid on her home a day before she planned to declare herself president of the breakaway Georgian region.

Nashi Denies Cyberattack on Kommersant, Threatens Lawsuit

Pro-Kremlin youth organization Nashi responded Friday to accusations by a Kommersant executive that Nashi was behind a cyberattack on the newspaper's website in 2008.

United Russia to Undergo Rebranding

United Russia is searching for a way to reinvent itself, considering options ranging from a name change to dissolving the party and creating new factions, several high-placed party officials told newspaper Izvestiya on Friday.




Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook

print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment





Most Read