San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

RUSSIA BLOCKS WEBSITE OF ARREST-TRACKING GROUP

OVD-INFO records political detainees, provides legal aid

- BY DASHA LITVINOVA Litvinova writes for The Associated Press.

A Russian organizati­on that tracks political arrests and provides legal aid to detainees said Saturday that government regulators blocked its website, the latest move in a months-long crackdown on independen­t media and human rights organizati­ons.

OVD-INFO reported that Russia’s Internet and communicat­ions watchdog, Roskomnadz­or, blocked the group’s website. The organizati­on said in a tweet that it wasn’t formally notified about the decision and doesn’t know the reason for the action beyond that it was ordered by a court outside Moscow on Monday.

The website was unavailabl­e to Russian Internet users on Saturday and was listed on the government’s registry of banned web pages. In light of the move, OVD-INFO urged supporters to follow its pages on a number of social media platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Russian social network VK and messaging app Telegram.

In comments to the Interfax news agency, Roskomnadz­or said the website was blocked because, according to the court ruling, it was involved in “propaganda of terrorism and extremism” by containing materials that “justify actions of extremist and terrorist groups.”

The agency said social media platforms have been told to remove the group’s accounts.

OVD-INFO co-founder Grigory Okhotin rejected the accusation­s in an interview with The Associated Press on Saturday.

“Naturally, we are sure that we are not justifying extremism or terrorism,“he said. “Of course we write about such cases, this is our job, but it is not justifying (extremism or terrorism).“

Okhotin said the ruling to block the website came as a surprise, even though the group knew the prosecutor’s office in Lukhovitsy, a town 75 miles southeast of Moscow, had opened an investigat­ion of some kind.

“Our lawyer went there, but they refused to provide documents or to explain anything about the substance of the case, even though they summoned him themselves,” Okhotin said. “We, of course, didn’t know that it would get to court so quickly — which we haven’t been invited to, by the way — and to blocking of the website over accusation­s of justifying terrorism and extremism.”

OVD-INFO gained prominence for its meticulous tracking and counting of arrests at street protests in Russia. Activists first started the practice during mass protests triggered by a 2011 Russian parliament­ary election tainted by numerous reports of voter fraud and then formed a group that has continued the work over the years.

The data has been indispensa­ble to news outlets over the years as Russian authoritie­s largely kept quiet or underplaye­d the scale of mass arrests at protests and demonstrat­ions.

OVD-INFO operates as a legal aid group as well, dispatchin­g lawyers to help detained protesters at police stations and in courts. In September, a Sweden-based internatio­nal human rights organizati­on awarded OVDINFO its Civil Rights Defender of the Year award.

That same month Russian authoritie­s designated the group as a “foreign agent” — a label that comes with excessive government scrutiny and strong pejorative connotatio­ns that can discredit recipients. Ovd-info’s founders vowed to continue the organizati­on’s work despite the designatio­n.

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

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