Veteran Russian journalist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Dmitry Muratov is to temporarily leave his position as Novaya Gazeta’s editor-in-chief while he mounts a legal challenge against his recent designation as a “foreign agent” by Russia’s Justice Ministry.
“Muratov is in strong disagreement with the Justice Ministry’s decision and will be filing a lawsuit,” the Novaya Gazeta newsletter said on Monday, announcing that current deputy editor-in-chief Sergey Sokolov would become acting editor-in-chief.
Muratov was declared a “foreign agent”, a term that can be applied to anyone the government decides is subject to “foreign influence”, on Friday. Foreign agents have various financial and professional restrictions placed on their activities.
The Ministry of Justice justified its decision by saying Muratov had “used foreign media to promote opinions that are aimed at forming a negative attitude towards Russia’s domestic and foreign policy”.
Reacting to the news that Muratov had been named a “foreign agent”, Nobel Foundation chairman Berit Reiss-Andersen said it was “sad that the Russian authorities are now trying to silence him. The accusations against him are politically motivated”.