MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia said on Thursday it was shutting down the operations of German broadcaster Deutsche Welle in Moscow and stripping its staff of their accreditation in a retaliatory move after Berlin banned Russian broadcaster RT DE.
Moscow said it would stop the German channel being broadcast in Russia and start proceedings that would see it declared a “foreign agent,” a designation that carries a negative Soviet-era connotation.
The Russian foreign ministry said it would also bar entry to Russia for German officials involved in the move to ban RT DE.
State-funded Deutsche Welle said it formally protested against the move and would take legal action. “We are being made a pawn here in a way that media only have to experience in autocracies,” Deutsche Welle Director Peter Limbourg said in a statement.
Hendrik Wuest, premier of North Rhine-Westfalia state where Deutsche Welle is headquartered, called Russia’s action “a massive and deliberate attack on the freedom of press, which we strongly condemn.”
The row comes amid wider tensions with the West over Ukraine that are an early test of political relations between Berlin and Moscow after German Chancellor Olaf Scholz took office in December.
The Kremlin said earlier on Thursday that a trip by Scholz to Moscow was on the agenda, but that a date was not yet confirmed.
German journalist association DJV called on Russian President Vladimir Putin to immediately lift the ban on Deutsche Welle.
“There is no justification for this drastic censorship measure,” said DJV chair Frank Ueberall in a statement, calling the move “cheap tit for tat”.
Ueberall also called on the German government to protest the Russian move clearly and in a way that cannot be ignored.
Germany’s MABB media watchdog and Commission for Licensing and Supervision (ZAK) of media institutions said this week that RT DE could not broadcast in Germany using a Serbian licence, a decision that angered Russia.
In a statement on its website detailing its retaliatory measures, Russia’s foreign ministry described the German move as “unfriendly”.
The announcement comes amid a crackdown on media outlets that Russia considers “foreign agents”. It uses the term to designate foreign-funded organisations it says are engaged in political activity.
(Reporting by Vladimir SoldatkinWriting by Tom Balmforth, Kirsti Knolle Editing by Andrew Osborn and Frances Kerry)