Is Journalism Worth Dying For__ Final Dispatches - Anna Politkovskaya [226]
Rose Revolution: a series of protests in Georgia in late 2003 to early 2004 in response to massive rigging of the parliamentary elections of November 2003. President Eduard Shevardnadze’s inability to cope with separatist problems and pervasive corruption caused him to lose the election to Mikheil Saakashvili. Shevardnadze claimed victory, but was forced to concede defeat after the Parliament building was seized by Saakashvili’s supporters, bearing roses as a symbol of non-violence; elite military units sided with the protesters. The election was re-run in January 2004 and Saakashvili’s party won by a landslide.
Ukraine: declared independence from Moscow in 1991, but was slow to implement free-market reforms; heavily dependent on Russia for energy supplies, which Russia has attempted to exploit for political advantage. Its population of 46 million is 78 per cent Ukrainian and 17 per cent Russian.
Wahhabism: the dominant form of Islam in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and western Iraq, which advocates a puritanical and legalistic stance in matters of faith and religious practice. Russian-speaking Wahhabi Arabs flooded Chechnya at the end of the First Chechen War, allowing the Russian Government subsequently to present Chechnya as a bridgehead of Islamic fundamentalism
Table of Contents
Cover
About the Author
Other Books by This Author
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Epigraph
So What am I Guilty Of?
1. Should Lives Be Sacrificed to Journalism?
2. The War in Chechnya
Part I: Dispatches from the Frontline
Part II: The Protagonists
Part III: The Kadyrovs
3. The Cadet
4. Nord-Ost
Photo Insert
5. Beslan
6. Russia: A Country at Peace
7. Planet Earth: The World Beyond Russia
8. The Other Anna
9. The Last Pieces
10. After October 7
Glossary