Ksenia Naka. The tragic death of photographer MIA " Russia today " is a matter of deep regret, said on Wednesday Last news Secretary General of the Tokyo Association of photojournalists Takashi of Hanoi.
" The tragic death during the fighting, when the journalist has undertaken its work, provided the right of the people to know the causes of the deepest regret. We, the reporters, can cross this death, continuing to shoot and to report from the scene. But this does not mean that reporters are required to pay for with your life, " said Janai.
As said Last news Secretary General of the Association, in the last photographer of the newspaper " Asahi ", he was not able to know himself Stenina, But it worked in Chernobyl Together with the legendary photojournalist Last news Igor Kostin, for this reason, the news of the death of journalist Agency took very seriously.
" To inform, to convey what I see is our job. Very sad, because this could cost lives, " says the photographer.
On Wednesday morning the CEO of MIA " today Russia " Dmitry Kiselev announced the capture of data of the RF IC, indicating that the missing at the beginning of August in Ukraine Agency photojournalist Andrey Stenin about a month ago, died in the district of Donetsk.
The car in which he was riding on an editorial assignment, was shot and burned on the highway. According to the information of the RF IC, the reporter was forcibly deprived of his life in the process of Ukrainian military attack on the convoy of immigrants, which was guarded by a few militia.
the Ministry of foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation asked in a persistent form from Kiev to thoroughly investigate the death of Stenina is already the 4th Russian journalist who was killed in the East of Ukraine in recent months. Condolences on the death of Stenina was expressed by the President of the Russian Federation centuries Putin, Prime Minister Medvedev D. A. and other Russian politicians. With own side of the NSDC of Ukraine told about the non-involvement of security forces to the incident.
sections: Politics |