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AFP
24 May, 2015, 15:11
Update: 24 May, 2015, 15:11
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Putin enacts law banning ‘undesirable’ NGOS

AFP
24 May, 2015, 15:11
Update: 24 May, 2015, 15:11
Russian President Vladimir Putin during a meeting with the Iraqi Prime Minister (not pictured) at the Kremlin in Moscow on 21 May 2015. Photo: AFP

Russia: Russian President Vladimir Putin officially enacted a controversial law banning ‘undesirable’ non-governmental organisations, the Kremlin said Saturday, in a move condemned by human rights groups and the United States.

The law allows authorities to bar foreign civil society groups seen as threatening Russia’s ‘defence capabilities’ or ‘consitutional foundations’ and go after local activists working with them, the Kremlin statement said.

Supporters presented the law as a ‘preventative measure’, necessary after the wave of Western sanctions put in place over the Ukraine conflict.

Under the law, passed by the Russian parliament this week, authorities can ban foreign NGOs and go after their employees, who risk up to six years in prison or being barred from the country.

It also allows them to block the bank accounts of the organisations until the NGOs ‘account for their actions’ to the Russian authorities.

Lawmakers cited the need to stop ‘destructive organisations’ working in Russia, which could threaten the ‘value of the Russian state’ and stir up ‘colour revolutions’, the name given to pro-Western movements seen in some former Soviet republics over the last several years.

Critics have said that the vague wording of the law—which gives Russia’s general prosecutor the right to impose the ‘undesirable’ tag without going to court—could allow officials to target foreign businesses working in Russia.

Amnesty International called it ‘the last chapter in the unprecedented repression against non-governmental organisations.’ The measure complements legislation already passed in 2012, which forces NGOs that receive foreign funds to register as a ‘foreign agent.’

The United States said Saturday it was ‘deeply troubled’ by the law.

‘We are concerned this new power will further restrict the work of civil society in Russia and is a further example of the Russian government’s growing crackdown on independent voices and intentional steps to isolate the Russian people from the world,’ State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said.

‘We continue to be concerned about increasing restrictions on independent media, civil society, members of minority groups and the political opposition,’ she added in a statement that is likely to be dismissed with disdain by the Kremlin.

‘Russians, like people everywhere, deserve a government that supports an open marketplace of ideas, transparent and accountable governance, equal treatment under the law and the ability to exercise their rights without fear of retribution.’

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