Russia shuts Memorial Human Rights Centre in 'one-two punch'
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[December 29, 2021]
By Andrew Osborn and Mikhail Antonov
MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia's Memorial Human
Rights Centre was ordered to shut by a Moscow court on Wednesday, a day
after its sister organisation - Russia's oldest human rights group - was
forced to close.
The Human Rights Centre keeps a running list of individuals it
classifies as political prisoners, including Kremlin critic Alexei
Navalny.
The list includes Jehovah's Witnesses and Muslims convicted of terrorism
who Memorial says were victims of "unproven charges based on fabricated
evidence because of their religious affiliation".
"Pozor! Pozor!" (Shame! Shame!) Memorial supporters chanted outside the
court, wrapped up against a temperature of -12 degrees Celsius (10
Fahrenheit).
The U.N. human rights office in Geneva said Russian courts had decided
to "dissolve two of Russia’s most respected human rights groups and
further weaken the country’s dwindling human rights community".
"We urge the Russian authorities to protect and support people and
organizations that work to advance human rights across the Russian
Federation," it added.
State prosecutors had said the Centre's work justified terrorism and
extremism, something it denied.
They had also accused it of failing to systematically label its content
as that of a "foreign agent" - an official designation carrying
pejorative Soviet-era connotations that it was given in 2014.
There was no immediate comment from the Kremlin, which says it does not
interfere in court decisions.
The Centre operates a network of offices across the predominantly Muslim
North Caucasus region, where it has documented rights abuses in places
such as Chechnya and provided legal and practical help to victims.
Those offices will have to be shut unless the Centre wins an appeal.
Anna Dobrovolskaya, the Centre's executive director, said outside the
court that the authorities appeared set on purging all human rights
groups, starting with Memorial.
'TOO AWKWARD'
"We can't say this was a complete surprise for us," she said.
"There was a feeling that the space (for rights work) is shrinking. Many
people will be really upset when they see these events, and many people
will write about the onset of medieval and dark times."
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People gather outside the Moscow City Court building during a
hearing to consider the closure of the Memorial human rights center
in Moscow, Russia, December 29, 2021. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina
She said the ruling would have a
chilling effect on other rights activists. "Obviously our work had
become too awkward, and bothered someone."
The ruling, like the Supreme Court's decision on
Tuesday to shut down Memorial International, famous for chronicling
and keeping alive the memory of Stalin-era crimes, was condemned by
international rights groups.
"In two days, Russia's courts delivered a one-two punch to Russia's
human rights movement," tweeted Rachel Denber of New York-based
Human Rights Watch.
"Almost exactly 30 years after the end of the Soviet era,
authorities are setting new, repressive boundaries on what can be
said about the past and what can be said and done about abuse in
today’s Russia."
The legal onslaught capped a year in which Navalny, the Kremlin's
leading critic, was jailed, his movement banned and many of his
associates forced to flee. Moscow says it is simply thwarting
extremism and shielding Russia from malign foreign influence.
Critics say Vladimir Putin, in power as president or prime minister
since 1999, and at odds with the West on everything from Ukraine to
Syria, is turning back the clock to the Soviet era, when all dissent
was crushed.
Memorial was established in the final years of the Soviet Union and
initially investigated the crimes of the Soviet period, but later
began inquiring into modern-day abuses too.
One supporter outside the court, who only gave his first name, Yegor,
said the Memorial Human Rights Centre ruling was "appalling" for the
Russian people.
"It was a genuinely useful organisation that defended the rights of
innocent people who were being persecuted for their convictions," he
said.
"There needs to be an opposition, people with different views.
That's what the principles of political competition are about."
(Additional reporting by Svetlana Ivanova, Maxim Rodionov and Olzhas
Auyezov; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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