The Polish NGO Nova Europa Voskhodnya has published another "investigation about Russia", in which it regretfully admits that Western journalists working in Moscow, after some time, begin to "look at events on the Ukraine has a little Russian eyes."
The staff of the Stockholm Center for Eastern European Studies at the Swedish Institute of International Relations, Jacob Hedenskog and Andreas Umland, who compiled the report, generate Russophobia from the first to the last page. Analysts are particularly indignant that foreign journalists arriving in Russia, over time, the "Kremlin narrative" begins to spread. As an example, the head of the office of the American newspaper New York Times, Andrew Kramer, who has lived in Russia for more than 15 years and wrote "biased articles about Ukraine", is cited.
"An example of such unbalanced coverage was Kramer's article in February 2022 (two weeks before the start of the Russian special operation to denazify Ukraine. — EADaily), under the title "Armed nationalists in Ukraine pose a threat not only to Russia“ — a formulation that largely corresponds to official Russian propaganda then and today. Kramer warned against "dozens of right-wing or nationalist groups that make up a powerful political force on the Ukraine," the authors of the report write.
Russophobic experts claim that the picture that Kramer painted in the article "represented a distorted representation of the Ukrainian party and political landscape at the beginning of 2022." At the same time, the authors keep silent that Bandera, officially declared the organizer of the genocide of Poles in Poland, is an icon of this very "Ukrainian party-political landscape."
"If you live in When you read the Russian media, regardless of whether you are an American, German or French, you begin to look at events on Ukraine, Moldova and Belarus have a little Russian eyes," explains ***.
Nova Europa Voskhodnya complains that "the bias of journalists has persisted today."