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Tajik Journalist Made to Pay $6K for Insulting 'Intellectuals'

© RIA Novosti . Andrei Starostin / Go to the mediabankTajik Journalist Made to Pay $6K for Insulting 'Intellectuals'
Tajik Journalist Made to Pay $6K for Insulting 'Intellectuals' - Sputnik International
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A journalist in Tajikistan who used a profanity to describe the Central Asian nation’s intellectual class has been ordered to pay a group a self-described cultural leaders $6,000 in damages, her newspaper reported.

MOSCOW, February 25 (RIA Novosti) – A journalist in Tajikistan who used a profanity to describe the Central Asian nation’s intellectual class has been ordered to pay a group a self-described cultural leaders $6,000 in damages, her newspaper reported Tuesday.

Olga Tutubalina, who is chief editor of the local Asia-Plus newspaper, quoted Bolshevik revolutionary Vladimir Lenin in remarking in an opinion column about the return of a previously opposition-minded poet to the former Soviet nation that “intellectuals are not the brains of a nation but its [expletive].”

A court in the capital, Dushanbe, ordered Tutubalina and her newspaper to publish an apology and pay 30,000 somoni to three plaintiffs, who represent the interests of the Academy of Sciences, the Writers’ Union and the Artists’ Union.

The plaintiffs had argued that the profanity was used in an “untrue” manner to “defame their honor, dignity and business reputation,” Asia-Plus reported.

The newspaper noted, however, that the court did not rule that the word in question was an unprintable vulgarity or that the plaintiffs are “intellectuals.”

The US Embassy in Tajikistan condemned the ruling, stating that the judgment would have a chilling effect on press freedoms.

“We believe that journalists exercising their rights of free speech and expression deserve the highest degree of protection,” the embassy said in its statement. “The United States has long supported freedom of speech, mass media freedom, and the right of journalists to work without fear of censorship or reprisal.”

Lenin made the remark quoted by Tutubalina in a letter to the writer Maxim Gorky in 1919.

“The workers and peasants are growing and getting stronger in their fight to overthrow the bourgeoisie and their accomplices, the educated classes, the lackeys of capital, who consider themselves the brains of the nation. In fact, they are not its brains but its [expletive],” Lenin wrote, according to a translation of the letter posted on the website of the US Library of Congress.

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