Los Angeles Times

Russia targets U.S. and other media in tit-for-tat

Radio Free Europe is required to register as a foreign agent.

- By Sabra Ayres sabra.ayres@latimes.com Twitter: @sabraayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — The warning from the Russian Ministry of Justice said the Moscow bureau of U.S.-funded Radio Free Europe should prepare to register as a foreign agent, a move critics view as an attempt to limit free speech.

Editors and reporters at the broadcast news bureau read the emailed warning, looked up from their computers and quickly went back to work.

“We had been expecting something for a long time,” Ivan Martynenko, a reporter for the news outlet’s Russian-language website, Radio Liberty, said Thursday at Radio Free Europe’s newsroom in central Moscow.

The email arrived Wednesday night, but Russian politician­s for months had been saying Radio Free Europe’s programs and website spread false or negative reports to try to harm Russia.

Then the U.S. Justice Department announced this month that it would require the Russian state-owned RT channel to register as a foreign agent. U.S. intelligen­ce agencies have accused RT of involvemen­t in alleged Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election, but Russia has denied meddling in the U.S. election.

The Justice Department’s action infuriated the Kremlin and left news outlets such as Radio Free Europe vulnerable to retaliatio­n in the diplomatic tit-fortat between Moscow and Washington.

The lower house of parliament, the State Duma, moved swiftly to pass amendments to its media law to require all foreign media reporting in Russia and funded from abroad to register as foreign agents.

Duma deputies behind the law made it clear that it was a retaliator­y move against the Justice Department’s decision on RT. Parliament­ary floor discussion over the proposed bill was sprinkled with a form of patriotism that has become the norm in modern Russia, after most of the Western world scorned President Vladimir Putin for the 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula in Ukraine.

“We didn’t want to approve this law, but we were made to,” said Pyotr Tolstoy, the Duma deputy who spearheade­d the drafting of the legislatio­n. “It’s not that all media will have to register as foreign agents. Today, we’ve given the Ministry of Justice a tool to pick organizati­ons for precision strikes on certain media.”

Gennady Zyuganov, the leader of the Communist Party, said the U.S. decision regarding RT was the latest attack by the United States against Russia.

“The U.S. has always been jealous of the U.S.S.R.,” he said in a passionate floor speech in the Duma, using the acronym for the former Soviet Union. “We are the winners of seven wars!”

The new amendments to the media law are similar to a controvers­ial 2012 Russian law, which requires nongovernm­ental organizati­ons receiving funding from abroad to declare themselves as foreign agents, a term that during Russia’s history of intrusive state security apparatuse­s has led to stigmatiza­tion.

Dozens of civil society and human rights groups were forced to close because the law made funding too difficult. Those that continued to operate were required to produce detailed financial reports and adhere to other rules.

Critics said the foreign agent law was a Kremlin tool for crushing independen­t voices and civil society. The human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal warned in a statement Wednesday that a new law for foreign media registrati­on risks damaging an already fragile freedom of speech in Russia.

“This legislatio­n strikes a serious blow to what was already a fairly desperate situation for press freedom in Russia,” Denis Krivosheev, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s deputy director for Europe and Central Asia, said in a statement. “Over the last couple of years, the Kremlin has been tirelessly building a media echo chamber that shuts out critical voices, both inside Russia and from abroad.”

There are critics of the Justice Department’s decision to enforce the Foreign Agent Registrati­on Act rules on RT. The law created in 1938 was designed to protect against Nazi propaganda. Since then, it has applied mainly to lobbyists working for foreign government­s. Some government-funded media organizati­ons have registered.

RT did register this week with the U.S. as a foreign agent under the auspices of its U.S.-based company, T&R Production­s.

The Committee to Protect Journalist­s said in a statement that it opposed the U.S. Justice Department’s decision, suggesting it set a dangerous precedent.

“We’re uncomforta­ble with government­s deciding what constitute­s journalism or propaganda,” the statement said, quoting the group’s North America program coordinato­r, Alexandra Ellerbeck.

CNN, which is a privately owned company, the BBC and Germany’s Deutsche Welle are also considered possible targets for Russia’s registrati­on requiremen­t.

 ?? Sabra Ayres For The Times ?? “WE had been expecting something,” said a reporter for Radio Free Europe’s Russian-language website.
Sabra Ayres For The Times “WE had been expecting something,” said a reporter for Radio Free Europe’s Russian-language website.

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