BBC Russian Journalist Moves Abroad After ‘Foreign Agent’ Labeling
A prominent Russian investigative journalist working for
the BBC’s Russian service said on Monday he has left the country two months
after being labeled a “foreign agent.”
In a video published by BBC Russia, Andrei Zakharov said he
moved to Britain after facing “unprecedented surveillance” following his
designation as a “foreign agent” in October.
Zakharov — seen as one of the most reputable investigative
journalists in the country — broke the story on President Vladimir Putin’s alleged
ex-mistress and their purported extramarital daughter late last year. He also
reported on Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections and most
recently investigated the Russia-based hacking collective Evil Corp.
In the video published Monday, Zakharov said he did not know
the exact reason why he was being followed, but linked the surveillance to his
reporting.
“It is not yet clear what the surveillance was connected
with: the fact that I was recognized as a ‘foreign agent,’ or, perhaps, with
the work I did about hackers from the Evil Corp group, which I worked on with
my British colleagues,” Zakharov said.
Zakharov is the latest in a string of journalists and human
rights activists who have left the country in recent months after being labeled
as a “foreign agent.”
Russia’s Justice Ministry currently lists more than 100
entities and individuals as “foreign agents,” the majority of which were added
to the registry in 2021.
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