Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russia candidates use ploy to skirt rally law

- DARIA LITVINOVA

MOSCOW — Several dozen Russians gathered Saturday in the center of Moscow to protest Russian authoritie­s’ recent crackdown on independen­t media outlets.

The small rally was organized by several opposition candidates in Russia’s Sept. 19 parliament­ary election and officially billed as a meeting between candidates and voters in order to avoid detentions and accusation­s of staging an unauthoriz­ed rally.

In their speeches, the candidates condemned the recent designatio­n of several independen­t media outlets, including Russia’s top independen­t TV channel Dozhd and popular news site Meduza, as “foreign agents.” The label carries strong pejorative connotatio­ns that can discredit the recipient and implies additional government scrutiny.

“Our authoritie­s want to completely wipe out the media sphere. The labeling now of Dozhd, Meduza and other media as ‘foreign agents’ are steps toward establishi­ng a dictatorsh­ip that was described by Orwell, with the main slogan being: ‘Ignorance is power,’” said activist Nikolai Kavkazsky, who is running for parliament on the ticket of the liberal Yabloko party.

Independen­t media outlets, journalist­s, opposition supporters and human-rights activists in Russia have faced increased pressure ahead of the Sept. 19 vote, which is widely seen as an important part of President Vladimir Putin’s efforts to cement his rule before the next presidenti­al election in 2024.

The 68-year-old Russian leader, who has been in power for more than two decades, pushed through constituti­onal changes last year that would potentiall­y allow him to hold on to power until 2036.

In recent months, the government has designated a number of independen­t media outlets and journalist­s as “foreign agents” and raided the homes of several prominent reporters. The publisher of one outlet that released investigat­ive reports exposing alleged corruption and abuses by top Russian officials and tycoons close to Putin was outlawed as an “undesirabl­e” organizati­on.

Two other news outlets shut down after authoritie­s accused them of links to “undesirabl­e” organizati­ons.

The Kremlin has rejected accusation­s that it is stifling free press and insisted that the “foreign agent” designatio­n doesn’t bar outlets from operating.

The wave of repression­s against independen­t outlets has prompted protests in Moscow.

No detentions were reported at Saturday’s rally.

 ?? (AP/Pavel Golovkin) ?? Parliament­ary candidate Sergei Mitrokhin, along with other opposition candidates and activists, meets with voters Saturday in Moscow despite a law against staging unauthoriz­ed rallies. The main topic was the crackdown on independen­t news outlets.
(AP/Pavel Golovkin) Parliament­ary candidate Sergei Mitrokhin, along with other opposition candidates and activists, meets with voters Saturday in Moscow despite a law against staging unauthoriz­ed rallies. The main topic was the crackdown on independen­t news outlets.

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