'Total repression': Russia orders top rights group shut, capping year of
crackdowns
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[December 28, 2021]
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia's Supreme
Court ordered the country's best-known human rights group on Tuesday to
be liquidated for breaking a law requiring groups to register as foreign
agents, capping a year of crackdowns on Kremlin critics unseen since the
Soviet days.
The shuttering of the group Memorial closes a year in which the top
Kremlin critic was jailed, his political movement banned and many of his
allies forced to flee. Moscow says it is simply enforcing laws to thwart
extremism and shield the country from foreign influence.
"This is a bad signal showing that our society and our country are
moving in the wrong direction," the TASS news agency quoted Memorial
Board Chairman Jan Raczynski as saying.
Closing the group would increase the risk of "total repression" in
Russia, one of Memorial's lawyers, Maria Eismont, said during the final
hearings on Tuesday.
Memorial has called the lawsuit politically motivated. The Interfax news
agency quoted a lawyer for the group as saying it would appeal, both in
Russia and at the European Court of Human Rights.
Established in the "glasnost" era of Soviet liberalisation by prominent
dissidents including the widow of Nobel Peace Prize-winner Andrei
Sakharov, Memorial initially focused on documenting the crimes of the
Stalinist era.
It served as Russia's main rights group through two wars in Chechnya in
the 1990s, and has more recently spoken out against repression of
critics under President Vladimir Putin.
The authorities placed the group on an official list of "foreign agents"
in 2015, a move that entailed numerous restrictions on its activities.
Last month, prosecutors accused the Moscow-based Memorial Human Rights
Centre and Memorial International, its parent structure, of violating
the foreign agent law.
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Police officers escort away a supporter of the human rights group
International Memorial outside a court building during a hearing of
the Russian Supreme Court to consider the closure of International
Memorial in Moscow, Russia December 28, 2021. REUTERS/Evgenia
Novozhenina
Prosecutors said Memorial
International breached the regulations by not marking all its
publications, including social media posts, with the label. They
accused the Moscow-based centre of condoning terrorism and
extremism.
Speaking at the final hearing on Tuesday, a state prosecutor said
Memorial had organised large-scale media campaigns aimed at
discrediting the Russian authorities, according to TASS.
The group has denied any serious violations and called the lawsuits
political. It has said its members would continue their work even if
it is dissolved.
Putin, a former spy in the Soviet KGB security service, said this
month Memorial had defended organisations Russia considers extremist
and terrorist, and that its list of victims of Soviet-era repression
included Nazi collaborators.
The past year has also seen Putin's leading critic Alexei Navalny
jailed on charges he says were trumped up, after returning from
Germany for treatment for poisoning that Western countries describe
as a state-backed assassination attempt. Navalny's political network
was banned as extremist and many of his allies have been jailed or
fled.
Russia defends the independence of its legal system and says its
laws on extremism and foreign influence are similar to those in
other countries. It denies any role in poisoning Navalny.
(Reporting by Maria KiselyovaWriting by Olzhas AuyezovEditing by
David Clarke and Peter Graff)
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