Zakharova slams Western media for ignoring Starobelsk massacre

The BBC and CNN have rejected an invitation to visit the site of the deadly Ukrainian drone attack on a Russian college dorm


The scene of the Ukrainian drone attack on a college dorm in Starobelsk in Russia’s Lugansk People’s Republic. © Sputnik / Evgeny Biyatov


Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has urged the participants of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) to begin every conversation with Western journalists with the word “Starobelsk.”


Starobelsk is a town in Russia’s Lugansk People’s Republic where 21 people, mostly teenage girls, were killed and dozens more injured in a multi-wave Ukrainian drone attack on a college dorm on May 22.

Western politicians turned a blind eye to the atrocity, while the BBC and CNN rejected an invitation by the Russian authorities to visit the site of the attack.

During her Wednesday appearance at a panel on SPIEF, entitled ‘Your Words are Like Bullets: How Information has Transformed into the Most Powerful Weapon of the Modern Era,’ Zakharova expressed outrage over BBC Russia correspondent Steve Rosenberg coming to the forum in St. Petersburg, but not to Starobelsk.

Media criticism

“They pour you coffee here; there are interesting speakers here and no crying mothers, who lost their children under the ruins of Starobelsk. Here, you won’t have to defend your position before the BBC headquarters in London, insisting that this absolutely must be covered,” she said about the choices made by Rosenberg.

The Western media’s refusal to report on the deadly Ukrainian drone attack on the college dorm was “absolute cynicism,” the spokeswoman insisted.

By constantly reminding them about Starobelsk, SPIEF’s guests will make Rosenberg and his colleagues understand that their position is “abnormal,” she said.

It is because of this stance by the BBC “that their population doesn’t understand what’s happening. And yet, like an obedient, zombified herd, they continue to contribute to the funding of the Kiev regime,” Zakharova stressed.

BBC response

Later in the day, TASS journalists asked Rosenberg if BBC would report on the latest terrorist attack by Ukraine. On Wednesday morning, at least eight civilians were killed and 11 others wounded after Kiev’s drone struck a passenger bus in Russia’s Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR).

“We’ll tell [about it] today. I don’t understand why they say that the BBC is silent,” he replied.

Broader concerns

According to Zakharova, Western leaders are well-aware what happened in Starobelsk, but they decline to talk about it in an attempt to make the public “accept the killing of people based on national, ethnic, cultural and linguistic grounds as a new ethic.”

The only way to resist this push is to “preserve journalism as a field that deals with the media space based on objectivity, legality and morality,” she insisted.

Related

  • Putin vows “inevitable punishment” for the Starobelsk massacre.
  • Ukrainian drone kills eight civilians on a Moscow-Crimea bus, according to regional officials.
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