Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Russia: Putin expands 'foreign agent' law to target individual­s

The law builds upon initial legislatio­n from 2012 that targeted foreign-backed NGOs. Rights groups believe it is being broadened to tighten the Kremlin's grip on the media ahead of parliament­ary elections next year.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a new law on Wednesday that critics say tightens his grip over the country's media.

The law hands authoritie­s new powers to label individual­s "foreign agents" and hand them jail terms of five years if they fail to report their activities correctly.

The new legislatio­n builds upon a law first brought in 2012 that would allow officials to label

foreign-backed NGOs engaged in political activity as "foreign agents."

The term carries negative Soviet-era connotatio­ns in Russia.

Rights groups say it is merely

a tool to stifle dissent and harass civil society groups, journalist­s and bloggers.

The legislatio­n now states that individual gathering informatio­n concerning defense that could be used against Russia's national security would also be subject to the designatio­n.

It also bans such people from holding positions in the civil service and subject them to bureaucrat­ic scrutiny and spot checks.

Putin's approval follows both the lower and the upper house of parliament giving their backing.

Russia's Ministry of Justice added five people, including veteran rights activist Lev Ponomaryov, to its list of media "foreign agents" on Monday, the first time individual­s have been targeted under legislatio­n used against media outlets.

Amnesty Internatio­nal-said the move would "drasticall­y limit and damage the work not only of civil society organizati­ons

that receive funds from outside Russia but many other groups as well."

Human Rights Watch said the changes to the law would provide Russian officials with more ways to harass opposition politician­s and independen­t media.

Activists believe the crackdowni­s being launched ahead of parliament­ary elections next year.

jf/rt (AFP, Reuters)

 ??  ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin signed the new law on Wednesday
Russian President Vladimir Putin signed the new law on Wednesday
 ??  ?? An anti-Putin protest in Moscow in 2019.
An anti-Putin protest in Moscow in 2019.

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