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MOSCOW - Journalists at Vedomosti, a prominent Russian business publication, have accused their editor of imposing pro-Kremlin censorship upon them and suggested the board of directors appoint someone else.
In an editorial posted Thursday on the newspaper's website, journalists complained that acting editor-in-chief Andrei Shmarov had banned the publication of opinion polls carried out by a research firm that has irritated the Kremlin.
A day earlier, Vedomosti's media reporter, Kseniya Boletskaya, publicly complained that Shmarov had banned negative coverage of President Vladimir Putin's plans to change the constitution to allow him to extend his rule until 2036.
Anyone who flouted the ban would be fired, she said.
"Changes of this kind undermine trust in the publication," the editorial said, referring to the alleged ban on publishing offending opinion polls.
Staff were determined to defend the newspaper's values, it said.
"Having lost its reputation, Vedomosti will become another dependent and managed media outlet whose aim is not to satisfy readers' needs with news that has been verified and quality analysis, but to serve the interests and ambitions of its official and secret owners," it added.
Shmarov's response
Shmarov on Friday told Reuters he had not threatened to fire anyone and that his editorial decisions were his own and not the result of any instructions given by anyone else, including from any government or business structure.
Vedomosti, he said, was continuing to publish news items on subjects that he had been accused of banning.
The surveys that staff said had been prohibited, conducted by the Levada Centre, a pollster regarded as more independent than state counterparts, have regularly appeared in Vedomosti.
The paper this month published a Levada poll that found that 38 percent of Russians believed Putin represented the interests of oligarchs, bankers and big business.
Levada was officially classified a "foreign agent" by authorities in 2016, a designation that complicated its life and that is handed out to organizations deemed undesirable.
Asked about staff claims of censorship at Vedomosti, Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin did not interfere in media outlets' editorial policy and was unaware of the ban on Levada polling.
"We were and remain interested in having first-rate quality publications with very talented teams," Peskov said.
Reputation
Vedomosti has until now been regarded as one of the few high-profile publications in Russia not to be under the direct control of the authorities or businessmen close to the Kremlin.
Shmarov was appointed acting editor-in-chief at the end of March, after it was announced that two businessmen would be buying the newspaper.
"He [Shmarov] yesterday said that he went to the presidential administration for an interview before being appointed and that they drew him red lines [not to cross] and that the most serious one was Levada," Dmitry Simakov, a top Vedomosti editor, told Reuters.
"Yesterday I had a conversation with him and he told me not to mention Levada anymore. Otherwise, he said they [the Kremlin] would remove him and everyone else and that the publication didn't have any money."
Simakov said he had refused.
Philip Sterkin, the paper's deputy editor-in-chief, told Reuters that Shmarov, in conversations with employees, had referenced the Kremlin's stance on Levada's polls.