Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

RUSSIA CLAMPS down on virus reports.

- DARIA LITVINOVA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Daniel Kozin of The Associated Press.

MOSCOW — Two weeks ago, an opposition-leaning radio station in Russia interviewe­d political analyst Valery Solovei, who alleged that the government was lying when it said no one had died in the country from the coronaviru­s.

Solovei told radio station Echo Moskvy that at least 1,600 people might have died since mid-January. Russia’s media and internet watchdog, Roscomnadz­or, quickly pressured the station to delete the interview from its website.

The demand was part of a widespread government campaign against what authoritie­s called “fake news” about the pandemic.

On Tuesday, Russian lawmakers began putting some teeth behind the campaign, approving fines of up to $25,000 and prison terms of up to five years for anyone who spreads what is deemed to be false informatio­n. Media outlets will be fined up to $127,000 if they disseminat­e disinforma­tion about the outbreak.

Lawmakers rushed the bill through all three readings in just one day after President Vladimir Putin spoke about the need to counter “provocatio­ns, stupid gossip and malicious lies” about the outbreak.

The crusade began about a month ago, when Russia’s caseload was still in the single digits. The Kremlin’s stance of “everything is under control” prompted speculatio­n that authoritie­s might be hiding or underrepor­ting the scale of the outbreak in line with Soviet-era traditions of covering up embarrassi­ng truths.

A broad set of measures was outlined and a special “fake news” division in the government’s coronaviru­s task force was created. A group within Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee was put together to chase down alleged disinforma­tion. Social media users who doubted the official numbers and news outlets questionin­g the government response became targets for law enforcemen­t officials seeking to weed out anything that didn’t correspond with the official data.

“In crises, those in power try very hard to control the informatio­n and push their own agenda. And, of course, it makes sense to suppress alternativ­e points of view,” Solovei told The Associated Press.

The AP found at least nine cases against ordinary Russians accused of spreading “untrue informatio­n” on social media and on messenger apps, with at least three of them receiving significan­t fines.

A 32-year-old woman was fined $380 — a significan­t sum in a country with an average monthly salary of about $550 — for posting on social media something she heard on a bus about the virus in her region. A 26-year-old man was fined a similar amount for a comment he made under a news report claiming a woman died of the virus in a hospital. Another woman faces a fine of $380$1,200 for posting about virus cases in her region where no infections were officially reported.

On Monday, Hungary’s parliament also passed a law setting prison terms of up to five years for people convicted of spreading false informatio­n about the pandemic. Rights groups said the law allows the government to crack down on press freedom.

The effort to curb alleged disinforma­tion at home came as Russia is once again being accused of spreading it abroad. The European Union recently identified nearly 80 instances of virus-related disinforma­tion in the past two months.

 ?? (AP/Pavel Golovkin) ?? Traffic is uncharacte­ristically light Wednesday evening outside the Kremlin in Moscow. After President Vladimir Putin spoke out against “provocatio­ns, stupid gossip and malicious lies” about the coronaviru­s outbreak, lawmakers quickly approved penalties for spreading misinforma­tion.
(AP/Pavel Golovkin) Traffic is uncharacte­ristically light Wednesday evening outside the Kremlin in Moscow. After President Vladimir Putin spoke out against “provocatio­ns, stupid gossip and malicious lies” about the coronaviru­s outbreak, lawmakers quickly approved penalties for spreading misinforma­tion.

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