Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Possible Russian president of Interpol raises alarm in West

- By Danica Kirka and Angela Charlton

LONDON >> Interpol is facing a pivotal — some say possibly fatal — moment in its history as members decide whether to hand its presidency to a man who represents Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Kremlin critics fear they could soon face arrest wherever they go. Western government­s worry that Russia could use the post to undermine the rule of law.

Interpol, which elects a new president Wednesday, has weathered many challenges in its 95 years. While Hollywood has portrayed it as a hive of swashbuckl­ing agents, in reality it’s an organizati­on sometimes tangled in red tape and clashing geopolitic­al interests. Nazis took it over in the 1930s, and authoritar­ian government­s have long tried to use it to hunt down fugitive dissenters.

But the latest storm of criticism comes at an exceptiona­l time — just as Russia is trying to expand its global clout and as some powerful countries are questionin­g whether they need multilater­al organizati­ons like Interpol at all.

Interpol’s general assembly is choosing the agency’s new president at a meeting in Dubai where the frontrunne­r is Alexander Prokopchuk, a general in Russia’s Interior Ministry who is currently an Interpol vice president. Interpol’s interim president, South Korea’s Kim Jong Yang, is also seeking the post.

Two prominent Kremlin critics warned Tuesday that electing a high-placed Russian would undermine the internatio­nal law enforcemen­t agency and politicize police cooperatio­n across borders.

Bill Browder, who runs an investment fund that had once operated in Moscow, and oligarch-turneddiss­ident Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky told reporters in London that Putin has tried to use Interpol to hunt down critics such as themselves. Having a Russian lead the agency could intensify such efforts to silence dissent, they said.

Activists argue that the organizati­on needs to increase recent efforts at muscular reform, and this won’t happen if Prokopchuk becomes president, because of his ties to Putin.

“It was his government that organized a terrorist attack in the U.K. using chemical weapons in Salisbury. It was his government that shot down MH17, killing 298 innocent individual­s. It was his government that cheated and hacked in elections in the United States and Europe,” Browder said of Putin. “To put his representa­tive in charge of the most important internatio­nal crimefight­ing organizati­on is like putting the mafia in charge.”

To Moscow, the complaints are all part of a Western-led campaign to weaken a resurgent Russia.

Russia denies accusation­s of foreign interferen­ce and announced new charges against Browder this week in a long-running legal battle against him. Russian Interior Ministry spokesman Irina Volk accused critics Tuesday of running a “campaign to discredit” Prokopchuk, calling him a respected profession­al.

Browder has pressed for sanctions against Russian officials charged with human rights abuses after his former lawyer died in custody. Khodorkovs­ky, a former oil tycoon, spent a decade in prison after exhibiting political ambitions. Both said their notoriety would make them poor targets for abuse, adding that they were motivated to speak out because many other less-well-known campaigner­s would be silenced if government­s are allowed to export repression.

The White House came out Tuesday against the election of Prokopchuk, with National Security Council spokesman Garrett Marquis saying that “the Russian government abuses Interpol’s processes to harass its political opponents.” He said the U.S. “strongly endorses” Kim.

Added U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo: “We encourage all nations and organizati­ons that are part of Interpol and that respect the rule of law to choose a leader with credibilit­y and integrity that reflects one of the world’s most critical law enforcemen­t bodies. We believe Mr. Kim will be just that.”

Interpol’s general assembly is made up of its 192 member states, each of which has an equal vote.

Based in the French city of Lyon, Interpol is best known for issuing “red notices” that identify a suspect pursued by another country, effectivel­y putting them on the world’s “mostwanted” list.

Critics argue that countries like Russia, Turkey, Egypt, Iran and China have used the system to try to round up political opponents, journalist­s or activists.

The watchdog group Fair Trials Internatio­nal detailed in a report last month the strides Interpol has made in reducing political abuse of red notices. The group’s chief, Jago Russell, said a Russian official as Interpol president could stall or reverse those reforms.

“We’re at a pivotal moment for Interpol,” he told The Associated Press.

“Either countries back away from it and find other ways to cooperate, or Interpol fixes its system so that it can be trusted . ... Already there are noises about pulling out of Interpol” and creating a separate agency just for democratic countries, he said.

The U.S. seems committed to Interpol for now, but has pulled out of UNESCO and internatio­nal accords under President Donald Trump. Britain is pulling out of the European Union and has expressed concern about management of internatio­nal bodies funded by taxpayers.

Interpol itself won’t comment on the upcoming vote. The Interpol presidency is more of an oversight position, compared with the hands-on leadership role of the secretary-general.

Interpol’s charter explicitly proclaims its neutrality, and two years ago it introduced measures aimed at strengthen­ing the legal framework around the red notice system. As part of the changes, an internatio­nal team of lawyers and experts first check a notice’s compliance with Interpol rules and regulation­s before it goes out.

But the possibilit­y of a Putin loyalist in such a prominent role has prompted concern among those critical of the Russian president’s leadership. Four U.S. senators, including Marco Rubio, have urged the Trump administra­tion to oppose the Prokopchuk candidacy. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, who on Monday stated that Russia was “rooting for the Russian candidate,” said that amounted to meddling in the vote.

Fair Trials Internatio­nal warned that a Russian president of Interpol could try to limit the money spent on staff needed to vet red notices, for example, or get rid of a recent measure to protect refugees from unfair arrest.

This is far from the first time that Interpol’s votes are causing controvers­y.

Human rights groups raised the alarm two years ago when Interpol’s general assembly approved Meng Hongwei, a longtime senior Chinese security official, as president. Amnesty Internatio­nal criticized “China’s longstandi­ng practice of trying to use Interpol to arrest dissidents and refugees abroad.”

Meng is now under arrest in China as part of a possible domestic political purge — hence Wednesday’s emergency vote to replace him.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this image made from video, Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, right, and financier William Browder attend a joint press conference in London, Tuesday. Kremlin foes including financier Bill Browder, Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky and Alexei Navalny have warned that naming a top Russian police official to the job would undermine Interpol. Russian Interior Ministry spokesman Irina Volk lashed out at critics, accusing them of running a “campaign to discredit” the Russian candidate Alexander Prokopchuk.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this image made from video, Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, right, and financier William Browder attend a joint press conference in London, Tuesday. Kremlin foes including financier Bill Browder, Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky and Alexei Navalny have warned that naming a top Russian police official to the job would undermine Interpol. Russian Interior Ministry spokesman Irina Volk lashed out at critics, accusing them of running a “campaign to discredit” the Russian candidate Alexander Prokopchuk.

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