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The Sensational Story That Wasn’t:
Reports Of ‘Stoning’ Death Of Ukrainian Girl Turn Out
To Be False
31 May 2011
By Farangis Najibullah
The headlines were nothing short of chilling.
“Aspiring ‘Miss Ukraine’ Killed Under Shari’a Laws In
Crimea” warned Ukrainian online newspaper “Gazeta Po-Kievski.”
“Radical Islamists Murder Young Girl In Crimea,”
screamed Russia’s “Svobodnaya Pressa.”
“Muslim Girl,19, Stoned To Death After Taking Part In
Beauty Contest,” was the headline on Britain’s “Mail
Online,” the “Daily Mail” website.
The circumstances around the death of Kateryna Korin,
a 19-year-old Ukrainian student on the Crimean
peninsula, appeared to point to a made-for-tabloid
tragedy: a young beauty-pageant contestant brutally
killed by her admirer, a radical Islamist who chose to
stone her to death under an unforgiving interpretation
of Islamic law.
There was just one small problem: They weren’t true.
Law-enforcement officials in Crimea have responded to
the reports of Korin’s killing by saying the tragedy
was an “absolutely routine crime” that involved
neither stoning, Shari’a law, nor any religious
motive.
“The killing of the girl that took place in the
Sovietskoye district of Crimea does not have any
underlying reasons like religious, national, or
interethnic motives,” Olha Kondrashova, a spokeswoman
for the Crimean division of Ukraine’s Interior
Ministry, told RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service. “A young
man has been detained as a suspect, and an
investigation is under way.”
Horrendous Crime
The suspect is believed to be Bilyal Gaziev, a
16-year-old native of the same northern Crimean
district and a classmate of the victim’s at a local
college. He has been charged with premeditated murder,
according to law-enforcement officials quoted by
Ukrainian media.
So how did a routine — albeit tragic — crime of
passion turn into a frightening story about a Shari’a-sanctioned
stoning?
Some believe the suspect’s name and his parents’
religious backgrounds have played a role.
Some activists describe it as a campaign to incite
religious hatred against Crimean Tatars, a
predominantly Muslim ethnic group on the Crimean
peninsula. Some Ukrainian websites, including
ukra.news, point the finger at Russian media allegedly
seeking to manipulate religious sentiments to
destabilize Crimea.
Korin reportedly disappeared on May 12 and her body
was discovered a week later, dumped in a nearby
forest. Police believe she was strangled and then
struck in the head with a stone or other blunt object.
Eyewitnesses told reporters that Korin was last seen
going into the forest with Gaziev, who, according to
classmates and relatives, was Korin’s friend and
admirer.
Gaziev, an ethnic Russian, was adopted from an
orphanage by a Crimean-Tatar family, when he was two
months old. Quoting local religious leaders and
neighbors, media reports describe Gaziev’s parents as
non-practicing Muslims who don’t attend mosque.
Misinformation Chain
Initial reports about the killing appeared on May 25
but stuck to the basic facts that Korin had been slain
in a forest.
But a day later, Russian-language websites in Ukraine,
including Novoross.info and Rusnovosti.ru, began
giving the story a more sensational — and erroneous —
twist.
Some of those reports claimed that Gaziev was a
follower of radical Wahhabi teachings and that he and
two other men stoned the victim to death because she
violated Shari’a law by participating in a beauty
contest.
Novoross.info quoted Yuri Pershikov, leader of a local
Cossack youth organization called Zvezda, as a source
for the story — although it is unclear how he would
have specific knowledge about the crime. Pershikov
told the publication that the young woman was killed
by stoning, which he called a “medieval barbaric act.”
Pershikov also claimed, according to novoross.info,
that “Russian children are being murdered by Islamic
extremists” in the neighborhood of a local madrasah,
or religious school. He said that he wouldn’t rule out
the suspect had ties with students at the madrasah.
Two killings did in fact take place in the area in
2010, and the suspect was reportedly an ethnic Tatar.
But police say the suspect suffered from mental
illness. There was no evidence suggesting that the
killings resulted from Islamic extremism.
Pershikov also criticized the fact that Gaziev, the
ethnic Russian suspect, had been given up for adoption
to a Muslim family, calling it a “social experiment.”
The story then spread to media in Russia and was
picked up by international outlets, including “The
Daily Mail” — lending it a veneer of credibility. “The
Daily Mail” did not respond to requests for comment.
By June 2, the original story had been replaced to
suggest “a stalker” might be responsible for the
killing but continued to incorrectly identify Korin as
a “glamorous Muslim beauty queen.”
Finally, the story then went full-circle, with Russian
and Ukrainian news outlets citing “The Daily Mail”
report.
Remarkably, nobody in this chain of misinformation
checked the basic facts of the original report.
The ‘Islam Card’?
Crimean Tatars say the whole affair has provoked
anti-Muslim sentiment” and have called for an
investigation.
“It looks like an informational diversion,” says Rifat
Chubarov, a Crimean Tatar community leader. “Taking
into account that in recent days this information was
spread by many mass media outlets, I demand that our
Ukrainian Security Service launch an investigation to
find out the source of this false information.”
Locals in Crimea’s Sovietskoye district are clearly
troubled by the brutal crime but don’t link it to
religion, judging by interviews by RFE/RL’s Crimea
correspondent.
Until now, Islamic radicalism has not been an issue in
Crimean villages. But that might just change if
unscrupulous media continue to play the religious
card.
RFE/RL’s Ukraine Service correspondents Volodymyr
Prytula in Crimea and Maryana Drach in Prague
contributed to this report
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