You are here
Announcements
Recent blog posts
- Male Sex Trade Worker
- Communities resisting UK company's open pit coal mine
- THE ANARCHIC PLANET
- The Future Is Anarchy
- The Implosion Of Capitalism And The Nation-State
- Anarchy as the true reality
- Globalization of Anarchism (Anti-Capital)
- Making Music as Social Action: The Non-Profit Paradigm
- May the year 2007 be the beginning of the end of capitalism?
- The Future is Ours Anarchic
Russian Indymedia Collective Splits Over Conflict of Right-Wing Ideology
                        
  
                
    
      
               
  October 4, 2001 - 5:15pm -- nomadlab
  
    
  
  
    "October 1, 2001
 Statement of the Russian Indymedia Collective on changing the editor of
 Russian Indymedia, Vladimir Videmann in connection with his ultra-right
 views and actions.
 In Dec. 2000 the Russian Indymedia site was set up as the Russian branch
of  the international anti-corporate independent media centers. The site was
 founded and was edited by Vladimir Videmann (Guzman) who lives in Berlin
and  works as a BBC correspondent. The creation of this site wasn't done with
the  coordination of activists in Russia and other countries where Russian is
 actively used but was rather the private initiative of the editor. Despite
 this, many people used this site including activists from the anarchist,
 ecological, human rights and other social movements in Russia, Ukraine and
 other former Soviet countries.In summer 2001, nationalist texts started to appear on Indymedia, material
 from "Zavtra", including texts from the editor of this paper, the famous
 national patriot Alexander Prokhanov as well as texts by the famous
Russian  ideologue of the new right, Alexander Dugin, etc. Activists from
Indymedia  Russia tried to explain to the editor that such texts are not in the
spirit  of the Indymedia project but these comments fell on deaf ears. In
response,  Videmann started a discussion on "censorship" which served to confuse
the real purpose of he arguments and which was used to make people out to be
 against free speech. As we recently learned, in the spring of 2001,
Videmann  invited new right activists on Dugin's site (www.arctogaia.com) to
take part  in Russian Indymedia.
 In September 2001 we got irrefutable evidence of ideological and
 organization ties between Videmann and Russian and European new right
 organizations, in part material from the Russian fascist journal
"Naslediye  Predkov" and from Videmann's own journal "Imperativ". ( See the
text, Russian Indymedia in the hands of the new right on Sept. 28, 2001.)
 Taking all this into account, we feel it is impossible to work with the
 current editor of Russian Indymedia.
 We hope that the international Indymedia community will find some way to
 remove Videmann from this responsibility and to hand over editorship to a
 new editorial collective, made up, in part, by people from Russian
Indymedia in Kasimov, Kiev, St. Petersburg, Moscow and other cities.
 We are very concerned about the fact that new right activists have
 infiltrated was the journalists have labeled "the anti-globalization
 movement" and we would like to prevent such inflitration. On most
Indymedia  sites around the world they use the principle of open posting where
any person can post on the site. We respect this principle but we feel we must
 stress that this works well in countries where there are well-developed
 grassroots movements, which can't be said of Russia and  other Soviet
 countries. Unfortunately political movements here are dominated by
 conservative, nationalist and fascist forces which we feel it is necessary
 to fight against. Many of us came into the antiglobalization movement in
 part to fight such forces.
 We also feel that history shows us that totalitarians are very intolerant
 towards people with other points of view and that if fascists gain more
 influence in Indymedia, all would be lost. Instead of being Independent
 Media, it wold become an ideologically limited resource.
 We would like to point out that in some countries with strong right
 movements (like Germany, Quebec or Columbia), the editorial collectives of
 Indymedia can decide to oversee open posting and block certain posts.
 Taking into account the position of the right in Russia and other former
 Soviet countries, we feel it is necessary to impose some editorial control
 on the contents of Indymedia after the current editor is removed from his
 responsibilities. We would work out the mechanism for this control working
 in conjunction with other Indymedia sites.
 Signed:
 Maxim Butkevich, Kiev
 Ute Weinmann, Moscow
 Pavel Golubovski, Kiev
Alexei Kozlov, Voronezh
 Lyolik Kutsenko, Kiev
 Julia Kutsenko, Kiev
 Sergei Lushakov, Kiev
 Sergei Nedosekov, Kiev
 Nastya Osipova, Kiev
 Pavel Skurenevski, Kiev
 Andrei Tvardievich, Kiev
 Yulia Tikhomirova, St. Petersburg
 Vlad Tupikin, Moscow
 Yevgeni Faizullin, St.Petersburg
 Grigory Feldman, Moscow
 Tuuli Hakulinen, St. Petersburg
 Mikhail Tsovma, Moscow
"
  
  
  
    
  
      
"October 1, 2001
 Statement of the Russian Indymedia Collective on changing the editor of
 Russian Indymedia, Vladimir Videmann in connection with his ultra-right
 views and actions.
 In Dec. 2000 the Russian Indymedia site was set up as the Russian branch
of  the international anti-corporate independent media centers. The site was
 founded and was edited by Vladimir Videmann (Guzman) who lives in Berlin
and  works as a BBC correspondent. The creation of this site wasn't done with
the  coordination of activists in Russia and other countries where Russian is
 actively used but was rather the private initiative of the editor. Despite
 this, many people used this site including activists from the anarchist,
 ecological, human rights and other social movements in Russia, Ukraine and
 other former Soviet countries.In summer 2001, nationalist texts started to appear on Indymedia, material
 from "Zavtra", including texts from the editor of this paper, the famous
 national patriot Alexander Prokhanov as well as texts by the famous
Russian  ideologue of the new right, Alexander Dugin, etc. Activists from
Indymedia  Russia tried to explain to the editor that such texts are not in the
spirit  of the Indymedia project but these comments fell on deaf ears. In
response,  Videmann started a discussion on "censorship" which served to confuse
the real purpose of he arguments and which was used to make people out to be
 against free speech. As we recently learned, in the spring of 2001,
Videmann  invited new right activists on Dugin's site (www.arctogaia.com) to
take part  in Russian Indymedia.
 In September 2001 we got irrefutable evidence of ideological and
 organization ties between Videmann and Russian and European new right
 organizations, in part material from the Russian fascist journal
"Naslediye  Predkov" and from Videmann's own journal "Imperativ". ( See the
text, Russian Indymedia in the hands of the new right on Sept. 28, 2001.)
 Taking all this into account, we feel it is impossible to work with the
 current editor of Russian Indymedia.
 We hope that the international Indymedia community will find some way to
 remove Videmann from this responsibility and to hand over editorship to a
 new editorial collective, made up, in part, by people from Russian
Indymedia in Kasimov, Kiev, St. Petersburg, Moscow and other cities.
 We are very concerned about the fact that new right activists have
 infiltrated was the journalists have labeled "the anti-globalization
 movement" and we would like to prevent such inflitration. On most
Indymedia  sites around the world they use the principle of open posting where
any person can post on the site. We respect this principle but we feel we must
 stress that this works well in countries where there are well-developed
 grassroots movements, which can't be said of Russia and  other Soviet
 countries. Unfortunately political movements here are dominated by
 conservative, nationalist and fascist forces which we feel it is necessary
 to fight against. Many of us came into the antiglobalization movement in
 part to fight such forces.
 We also feel that history shows us that totalitarians are very intolerant
 towards people with other points of view and that if fascists gain more
 influence in Indymedia, all would be lost. Instead of being Independent
 Media, it wold become an ideologically limited resource.
 We would like to point out that in some countries with strong right
 movements (like Germany, Quebec or Columbia), the editorial collectives of
 Indymedia can decide to oversee open posting and block certain posts.
 Taking into account the position of the right in Russia and other former
 Soviet countries, we feel it is necessary to impose some editorial control
 on the contents of Indymedia after the current editor is removed from his
 responsibilities. We would work out the mechanism for this control working
 in conjunction with other Indymedia sites.
 Signed:
 Maxim Butkevich, Kiev
 Ute Weinmann, Moscow
 Pavel Golubovski, Kiev
Alexei Kozlov, Voronezh
 Lyolik Kutsenko, Kiev
 Julia Kutsenko, Kiev
 Sergei Lushakov, Kiev
 Sergei Nedosekov, Kiev
 Nastya Osipova, Kiev
 Pavel Skurenevski, Kiev
 Andrei Tvardievich, Kiev
 Yulia Tikhomirova, St. Petersburg
 Vlad Tupikin, Moscow
 Yevgeni Faizullin, St.Petersburg
 Grigory Feldman, Moscow
 Tuuli Hakulinen, St. Petersburg
 Mikhail Tsovma, Moscow
"
