Novaya Gazeta
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Novaya Gazeta | |
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Novaya Gazeta logo |
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Type | weekly tabloid |
Format | A2 per spread, A1 for supplement |
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Owner | paper staff, Mikhail Gorbachev, Alexander Lebedev |
Editor | Dmitry Muratov |
Founded | 1993 |
Political allegiance | Centre-Right[citation needed] |
Headquarters | Moscow |
Circulation | 525,450, 171,350 w/o regional publications insets |
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Website: www.novayagazeta.ru |
Novaya Gazeta (Russian: Новая Газета) is a Russian tabloid. The name translated into English would become "New Newspaper". Covering political and social issues, it is published in Moscow, Russian regions and some foreign countries. It is issued twice a week: on Mondays and Thursdays. The general circulation is now near 550,000 copies. In addition, a colour supplement, Svobodnoe Prostranstvo ("Free Space", Russian: Свободное Пространство), is issued each Friday.
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[edit] General information
Novaya Gazeta is known for being critical of Russian government policy. Anna Politkovskaya wrote for Novaya Gazeta until her assassination on October 7, 2006. The journalist told in an essay that the editors received
visitors every day in our editorial office who have nowhere else to bring their troubles, because the Kremlin finds their stories off-message, so that the only place they can be aired is in our newspaper, Novaya Gazeta.[1]
Yury Shchekochikhin, a renowned journalist and deputy in the State Duma, had also worked for the newspaper as an investigative journalist and had been a deputy Editor-in-Chief of it until he died after a mysterious and severe allergy on July 3, 2003. Some of his contributions published in Novaya Gazeta were related to the investigation of the Three Whales Corruption Scandal.
Former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and State Duma Deputy Alexander Lebedev own 49% of the newspaper and the paper's staff controls the remaining 51% of shares. Gorbachev has long been a friend of the paper. He used the money from the Nobel Prize which he won in 1990 to help set up Novaya Gazeta in 1993 and purchase its first computers.[2]
On November 26, 2001, Novaya Gazeta published an article by Oleg Lurie stating that the management of the International Industrial Bank headed by Sergey Pugachyov had been involved in money laundering in the Bank of New York (full text of the article in Russian: [1]). Pugachyov's bank brought a libel suit against the newspaper citing financial losses, as a number of its customers had allegedly changed the terms of their accounts in a loss-making way because of the publication. On February 28, 2002, the bank won the case in Moscow's Basmanny municipal court and was awarded 15 million rubles (about $500,000) in lost revenue, an unprecedented sum for Russian newspapers that might undermine the very existence of Novaya Gazeta, especially as on February 22 Novaya Gazeta had been ordered by the same Basmanny court to pay about $1 million for a corruption allegation against the Krasnodar Krai's top judge. In April the decision on the International Industrial Bank case was reconfirmed by a court. However, in an article of May 27, 2002 (full text in Russian: [2]), Yulia Latynina, a journalist of Novaya Gazeta, revealed that the bank's three customers named in the lawsuit were its subsidiaries or otherwise controlled by its board of directors, and claimed that Novaya Gazeta had requested to open a criminal fraud investigation into the activities of the bank. As a result, in June 2002 the International Industrial Bank renounced its claim to the compensation. [3][4]
[edit] Insets
Novaya Gazeta issues regularly contain free insets of its side-projects or other newly launched newspapers. United Civil Front newspaper (by the corresponding organisation) and Yabloko's newspaper were published in the form of such insets in the past.
Current insets are Shofyor ("Driver" or "chauffeur", Russian: Шофёр) side-project, popular-scientific Kentavr ("Centaur", Russian: Кентавр).
Le Monde diplomatique (Russian version) has been promoted by means of being issued as such insets for one year. The number of subscribers after that has amounted to 52 and continuation of issuing the inset has been considered senseless.[3]
[edit] Opinions about the newspaper
Boris Stomakhin considered the newspaper a revival center of opposition.[4] AlJazeera and Francesco Benvenuti referred to the newspaper as "anti-Putin".[5][6]
[edit] Awards
Henri Nannen Prize in 2007.[7]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Politkovskaya 2006
- ^ MosNews 2006
- ^ (Russian) http://www.novayagazeta.ru/data/2007/56/11.html
- ^ Anti-Satarov, Boris Stomakhin, November 15, 2004. Retrieved on April 29, 2008.
- ^ Gorbachev invests in anti-Putin paper, Aljazeera, June 23, 2006. Retrieved on April 29, 2008.
- ^ Europe as Seen from Russia, Francesco Benvenuti, EuroPressResearch, circa June 2007. Retrieved on April 29, 2008.
- ^ Henri Nannen Preis - Pressemitteilungen / 2007
[edit] References
- Politkovskaya, Anna (15 October, 2006), "I am a pariah", The Washington Post: B01, <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/14/AR2006101400805_pf.html>. Retrieved on 16 October 2006
- MosNews (7 June, 2006), "Gorbachev Buys Into Kremlin’s Most Vocal Critic", MosNews, <http://mosnews.com/news/2006/06/07/gorbystake.shtml>. Retrieved on 16 October 2006
[edit] External links
- Official site (Russian), computer translation, English edition.
- Image of the current issue's front page.
- Interview with Novaya Gazeta’s Editor-in-Chief Dmitriy Muratov by US Secretary Condoleezza Rice
- Novaya Gazeta Fined $1.5 Million for Libel by Nabi Abdullaev, The Moscow Times, March 19, 2002.
- Noviye Izvestia Dead Who's Next? by Vladimir Pribylovsky, The Moscow Times, February 28, 2003.