War on Truth: 7. Sergei: ‘It’s my duty to keep telling Russians the truth’
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BBC
2.8 • 947 Ratings
🗓️ 14 April 2022
⏱️ 22 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
After Russia’s first independent radio station was taken off air by the Kremlin, the journalists who worked there are finding ways to get round censorship of the war in Ukraine.
Sergei Buntman helped to found Echo of Moscow which for more than three decades provided an alternative to the news on Russian state media.
In the days following the invasion of Ukraine, his radio station and several other news organisations were forced to shut down for challenging the official narrative about the war.
Yet despite threats of violence and imprisonment, Sergei and some of his fellow Russian journalists are refusing to stay silent, and are finding new ways to make themselves heard.
They find themselves on the frontline of the information war that is being fought over Ukraine, alongside the military battle. And like the conflict on the ground, this fight also has real consequences for the people whose lives it touches.
Russia’s military assault has been accompanied by an onslaught of disinformation and propaganda from state media, trolls and influencers. With all sides seeking to capture and control the narrative, how do you tell what is fake and what is real?
In this podcast series, BBC disinformation reporter Marianna Spring investigates stories from Ukraine, Russia, and around the world, and hears from those caught up in the battle for the truth.
Producer: Ant Adeane
Editor: Ed Main
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | A group of men ran in with machetes. |
| 0:03.8 | I'm Livy Haydock, and from BBC Sounds and BBC Radio 5 Live, |
| 0:08.6 | this is gangster, the story of Georgie Pye. |
| 0:13.2 | The scene of the killing near a Chinese bookshop is being flooded with detectives. |
| 0:17.0 | Welcome to the world of the triads. |
| 0:19.6 | If the triads are coming out of you, you're done. |
| 0:21.5 | Where loyalty is sworn in blood. |
| 0:24.8 | Gangster, the story of Georgie Pye. |
| 0:27.6 | Listen first on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:31.3 | BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts. |
| 0:35.4 | I'm Seguer Buntman. |
| 0:36.6 | I'm a journalista Buntman. I'm a journalist. And 31 years ago, we started Radio Echo Moscow with my friend |
| 0:45.7 | Sege Korsen. |
| 0:50.0 | Sergei has spent decades on the airwaves of Moscow's first Russian independent radio station, |
| 0:57.5 | providing an alternative to state media's version of events. |
| 1:00.8 | We were the first, and we lived all the coups of 91, 93, and all the events, the Chechen wars and so on and so forth. |
| 1:17.1 | But this war in Ukraine was the final straw, or what overfilled the cup, as they say in Russian. |
| 1:23.0 | The first of March, they stopped our broadcasting and our site, website was closed. |
| 1:32.9 | And then our board closed and liquidated the whole company. |
| 1:38.2 | By they, Sergei means the Russian government and President Putin. |
| 1:43.0 | So, why hadn't this happened before? |
| 1:46.0 | It wasn't so dangerous and it wasn't so important for Putin and his administration. |
... |
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