Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russian rights group closed

Moscow court’s ruling latest move in activist crackdown

- DASHA LITVINOVA

MOSCOW — A court in Moscow granted a request Wednesday to shut down another prominent human rights organizati­on amid a crackdown on Russian rights groups, independen­t media and opposition supporters.

The Moscow City Court’s decision to shut down the Memorial Human Rights Center came a day after Russia’s Supreme Court revoked the legal status of its sister organizati­on, Memorial — a human rights group that drew internatio­nal acclaim for its studies of political repression in the Soviet Union.

Russian authoritie­s previously declared both organizati­ons as “foreign agents” — a designatio­n that brings additional government scrutiny and carries strong pejorative connotatio­ns. Prosecutor­s petitioned to shut down the groups last month, arguing they had repeatedly violated regulation­s obliging them to identify themselves as foreign agents in all content they produce.

Memorial and the Memorial Human Rights Center rejected the accusation­s as politicall­y motivated.

“We’ve been saying from the start that the ‘foreign agents’ law — and I’m doing the air quotations again — is not lawful, and it’s not to be amended but only abolished because it was designed with the aim of strangling civil society. Today, we received another proof of that,” Alexander Cherkasov, board chairman of the Memorial Human Rights Center, said Wednesday.

The rulings to close them drew widespread public outrage, with crowds of supporters showing up at courthouse­s on Tuesday and Wednesday despite freezing weather.

Both Memorial organizati­ons promised to appeal the rulings revoking their legal status. In a statement Tuesday, Memorial vowed to “find legitimate ways to continue our work.”

Several top U.S. and European officials condemned Tuesday’s decision to shut down Memorial as an attack on Russia’s civil society.

Amnesty Internatio­nal called Wednesday’s ruling to close the Memorial Human Rights Center “yet another blow to Russia’s civil society movement after years of relentless attacks.”

In recent months, Russian authoritie­s have mounted pressure on rights groups, media outlets and individual journalist­s, naming dozens as foreign agents. Some were declared “undesirabl­e” — a label that outlaws organizati­ons in Russia — or were accused of links to “undesirabl­e” groups, and several were forced to shut down or disband themselves to prevent further prosecutio­n.

Moscow city authoritie­s served another prominent human rights group with an eviction notice on Tuesday. The Civic Assistance Committee, which assists refugees and migrants in Russia, said officials handed the organizati­on a document voiding the agreement allowing the use of the space without compensati­on and ordered it to leave within a month.

 ?? (AP/Alexander Zemlianich­enko) ?? A police officer on Wednesday guards an entrance to the Moscow City Court as supporters of the Memorial Human Rights Center gather to protest the ruling shutting down the prominent organizati­on under a “foreign agents” law.
(AP/Alexander Zemlianich­enko) A police officer on Wednesday guards an entrance to the Moscow City Court as supporters of the Memorial Human Rights Center gather to protest the ruling shutting down the prominent organizati­on under a “foreign agents” law.

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