Friday, July 20, 2012

New laws restrict websites, charities

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/19/world/europe/russian-parliament-approves-greater-government-control-over-the-internet-and-nonprofits.html?_r=1

Russia’s upper house of Parliament moved to strengthen controls over the Internet and nonprofit organizations on Wednesday, prompting a warning from the United Nations human rights chief that the Kremlin is sliding back into Soviet ways.

A series of initiatives have been introduced as President Vladimir V. Putin begins a six-year term, facing an increasingly assertive opposition. The government has imposed draconian fines for people who participate in unsanctioned protests, and legislators voted to reinstitute criminal charges for slander, rolling back a reform adopted seven months ago by Dmitri A. Medvedev, Mr. Putin’s predecessor.

The bills approved on Wednesday would allow the government to block Web sites deemed dangerous to children and require nonprofits to identify themselves as “foreign agents” if they receive financing from outside Russia and are considered by the government to be engaged in political activities.

The criminalization of slander, she said, could “stifle all criticism of government authorities and limit the ability of individuals to address issues of transparency, corruption and abuse of power.”

The law on nonprofits — which passed with a vote of 141 to 1, with one abstention — has alarmed a variety of business, charity and religious groups, uncertain whether they will have to carry the label “foreign agent,” a term that invokes cold war espionage. A lawmaker tried to calm those fears in a meeting for nonprofit leaders held by the American Chamber of Commerce, saying the law would be applied only to nonprofits attempting to “change the political system.”

“We understand that events have begun to take place at a faster rate, that the degree of tension in society is growing,” said a United Russia deputy, Aleksandr Petrov, an author of recent amendments to the bill.

“We have one goal: to try, with the help of a number of laws, to create a certain stability, to provide for the integrity of the Russian Federation,” he said. “Yes, there should be political activity, but it should not be allowed to rock the boat which is called Russia.”

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