From the BBC:
“Memorial: Russia moves to
close major human rights group”
Russian prosecutors have filed a
lawsuit to liquidate the country's most prominent human rights group, Memorial.
The group said it had been notified by the Supreme Court that prosecutors had
demanded it be shut down over violations of a law on foreign agents. The group
said the move was politically motivated and without legal basis. Memorial is
Russia's oldest civil rights group and was established in the late 1980s by
dissidents including famed physicist Andrei Sakharov. The case will be heard on
25 November.
It comes amid a wider crackdown
on independent and dissenting voices in Russia. Memorial joins a growing list
of investigative news outlets, journalists and rights organisations to have
been labelled a foreign agent this year. "We're in shock. On the other
hand, this isn't surprising... In recent years such wild things have been
happening in Russia that this doesn't really elicit amazement," Oleg
Orlov, a Memorial board member, told Reuters news agency. "This is
obviously a political decision that has come down from somewhere above to
liquidate us. And this is a blow to all of civil society and a really serious
alarm bell for it." The Kremlin says the foreign agent law is justified
because Russians have the right to know when rights groups and media outlets
are receiving foreign funding to carry out what it says is political activity.
Memorial's future has been in
jeopardy before. In 2014, the justice ministry called for it to be
"liquidated" due to the way its branches were registered. A year
later, the group was placed on an official list of "foreign agents".
Its offices have been attacked on numerous occasions across the country. Set up
towards the end of the Soviet era, Memorial documents the repressions of Soviet
totalitarianism, and commemorates its victims. But it also speaks out about
current human rights abuses, and has criticised the government on topics such
as the Russian-backed conflict in Ukraine and Russia's growing list of
political prisoners. "Liquidating us won't mean that everything will
stop," Mr Orlov said. "We'll work from our apartments until they jail
us all. But of course, our work will really become much, much harder."
^ This is clearly Putin’s way of
silencing the truth about his Regime from being exposed to Russians and the
world. Soviet Communist Dictatorship couldn’t keep the truth from being known
and Putin’s Dictatorship won’t be able to either. ^
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