Pavel Gusev (journalist)

Pavel Nikolayevich Gusev (Russian: Павел Николаевич Гусев; born 4 April 1949, Moscow[1]) is a Russian journalist and public figure. He has been the editor-in-chief of the Moscow daily newspaper Moskovskij Komsomolets since 1983.[2] He is a professor of journalism at the International University in Moscow[3] and a member of Russia's Presidential Council for Civil Society and Human Rights.[1]

Pavel Gusev, 2016

He is also the head of the Moscow Union of Journalists, and has been critical of the treatment of journalists in the Russian Federation.[4]


Early life and education

Gusev was born on 4 April 1949 in Moscow, Russia.

He graduated from the Russian State Geological Prospecting University in 1971.[1] He earned a graduate degree in literature from Maxim Gorky Literature Institute in 1985.

Career

From 1971-1975, Gusev was a junior research associate at the Russian State Geological Prospecting University.

Gusev was involved in the Communist youth organization Komsomol from 1975 right up till 1983. He served as Second Secretary of Komsomol's Krasnopresnensky District branch in Moscow from 1975 till 1976, then First Secretary from 1976 till 1980. He worked in the international department of the Komsomol's Central Committee until 1983, when he joined Moskovskij Komsomolets in his present role as editor-in-chief.[1]

In 1991, Pavel Gusev stated that “... editors-in-chief and leaders of the press will always be selected for political or administrative reasons”.[5]

Viktor Shenderovich wrote about Pavel Gusev that his evolution was from a member of Komsomol to Gorbachev’s perestrojka wave and to a democrat-supporter of Yeltsin, then to a patriot from the Congress of Russian communities, a loyal supporter of the Moscow mayor Luzhkov and, finally, an obedient servant of Putin.[6]

Gusev is currently a member of Russia's Presidential Council for Civil Society and Human Rights, where he is chairman of the "Commission on Supporting Mass Media as the Basis of Civil Society".[1]

In May 2016, he was included in the sanctions list of Ukraine by President Petro Poroshenko, he was denied entry to Ukraine[7].

In 2018, Pavel Gusev was Vladimir Putin's confidant in the presidential elections in Russia.[8]

Awards

  • Laureate of the Russian public award The Best Feathers of Russia in 1999.
  • Order of Honour in 2009.
  • For Service to Moscow distinction in 2003.[1]
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gollark: It doesn't seem like ubq will make the container contain multiple submissions at once.
gollark: Or brute-force all possible permutations and see if the other string is one of them (case/space-insensitive).
gollark: Oh, or work out the minimal sequence of transpositions to give you the other string and see if it, well, exists or not?

References


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