Home » Italy condemns Russia’s arrest warrants for RAI journalists covering Kursk incursion

Italy condemns Russia’s arrest warrants for RAI journalists covering Kursk incursion

by Marko Florentino
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Moscow issues arrest warrants for RAI journalists Stefania Battistini and Simone Traini after their Ukraine coverage, sparking outrage in Italy over press freedom.

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Italy’s Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani has slammed Moscow’s decision to issue arrest warrants for two journalists from state broadcaster RAI following their coverage of Ukraine’s surprise military incursion into Russia’s Kursk region in August. 

On Monday, a Russian court ordered the arrest in absentia of journalist Stefania Battistini and her cameraman Simone Traini for allegedly “illegally crossing” the border during their reporting.

Moscow has also called for their extradition, a move that has sparked outrage in Italy and raised further concerns about freedom of the press in Russia. 

Tajani was quick to condemn the decision, calling it a direct attack on journalistic freedoms.

“The Russian arrest warrant for two RAI journalists is another form of persecution of press freedom,” Tajani wrote on X. “The Italian government will always stand in the defense of the right to independent reporting.” 

The battle for Kursk

Battistini and Traini are not the only journalists facing Moscow’s legal action. Russian authorities have placed several Western correspondents on a wanted list over their coverage of the incursion in Kursk, where Ukrainian forces seized control of large swathes of Russian territory in a surprise operation on 6 August. 

Since then, Ukrainian military sources have reported additional strikes on Snagost, a settlement near the international border, suggesting that they have advanced in recent weeks. 

Meanwhile, Russian forces have reportedly been tasked with driving the Ukrainian army out of the Kursk region by mid-October as well as creating a “buffer zone” extending into the Ukrainian border areas in northeastern Ukraine by the end of October.

The arrest warrants for Battistini and Traini point to the increasingly precarious position of journalists covering Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

The Kremlin’s crackdown on foreign media is seen by many as an attempt to control the narrative and suppress international scrutiny of its military actions.



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