Los Angeles Times

Russian activist groups struggle to survive

Ecology and civil organizati­ons are under threat over foreign donations.

- By Carol J. Williams carol.williams@latimes.com

MOSCOW — After decades of Soviet-era drilling, unregulate­d fisheries and haphazard constructi­on, residents of Russia’s Sakhalin Island have cheered the ecological protection­s secured by Sakhalin Environmen­t Watch over the last 20 years.

One of the most effective civil society movements to emerge in the post-communist era, SEW led the ravaged island’s campaign for protection of the pristine, 165,000-acre Vostochny Reserve, said to be the most productive salmon ecosystem on the planet.

The group fought successful­ly in court to have higher standards imposed on the powerful Gazprom monopoly for its fossil fuel exploratio­n. It also took legal action to force an internatio­nal consortium of oil giants behind the $12-billion Sakhalin I and II extraction projects to avoid sensitive life habitat and to scrap planned pipelines crossing a gray whale migration route.

But activist organizati­ons now face government threats to their own survival for having accepted foreign grants and donations for their ecological causes. They have been ordered to register as “foreign agents” because of internatio­nally supported conservati­on work recently condemned by the Justice Ministry as Western schemes to undermine the Russian government.

A $159,000 contributi­on from the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, $30,000 from the U.S.-based Wild Salmon Center and other gifts for the island’s environmen­tal campaigns are being returned as SEW attempts to sever ties with foreign partners that the Kremlin brands as Russia’s foes.

More than 90 nongovernm­ental organizati­ons in Russia have been listed as Western collaborat­ors under a 2012 law requiring groups receiving foreign funding and engaging in undefined political activity to register as “foreign agents.” That label from the Stalinist era still prompts fear among Russians being told by President Vladimir Putin that outside forces are bent on denigratin­g the country.

The nationalis­t-dominated parliament this year tightened the noose on the foreign partners of NGOs by empowering justice officials as of last month to brand them “undesirabl­es,” forcing them out of the country.

The Open Society Foundation­s of philanthro­pist George Soros, the U.S. National Endowment for Democracy, the MacArthur Foundation and other civil society bulwarks have been forced to close their Russian operations after being accused of engaging in prohibited political behavior.

“On one hand this is very serious but on the other it is completely absurd — Kafkaesque!” said Alexander Cherkasov, executive director of Memorial Human Rights Center in Moscow.

Memorial was fined $5,000 for failing to register under the 2012 law and for civil rights activities by an internatio­nal counterpar­t that is a separate NGO, Cherkasov said. Memorial Internatio­nal went to court on the human rights group’s behalf, explaining that the cited infraction­s were its own, though defending them as rightful free expression. The appeals court nonetheles­s upheld the foreign agent label on Cherkasov’s organizati­on and doubled the fine to $10,000.

“I’m trying to deal with cases of people being ‘disappeare­d’ and victims of harassment and injustice, yet I have to spend all my time fighting these absurd accusation­s,” Cherkasov said. “We survive. It’s not like Stalin times; no one is being executed by firing squad. But that may be the only difference.”

The crackdown has focused not only on the groups whose support for democracy and pluralism put them at odds with the Kremlin but also against NGOs engaged in government-endorsed programs.

The Civic Assistance Committee provides relief for those displaced by disaster or armed conflicts, including the one in eastern Ukraine that has sent hundreds of thousands of refugees to Russia. The Russian NGO periodical­ly receives contributi­ons from the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees.

The committee also receives money from the Russian government to care for displaced Russians, resulting, said chairwoman Svetlana Gannushkin­a, in the government punishing her agency for the same behavior that it helps finance.

“I think they want to control every benefit that goes out to any Russian, so that everyone is dependent on them,” she said of the Kremlin. “But this is destroying civil society. We are seeing the disintegra­tion of all institutio­ns. There is no legal recourse and no arena where real political debate can be held.”

The Sakhalin environmen­talists’ new status as suspected agents-provocateu­rs appears to be the result of the May legislatio­n’s definition of any attempt “to influence government authoritie­s” as doing so at the direction of foreign paymasters.

A SEW post on Russian social media appealing for restraint in Arctic developmen­t drew the attention of the regional Justice Ministry in August. A surprise twoweek inspection of SEW premises in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk produced the report citing alleged political activities.

The first of three alleged violations cited SEW’s criticism of the Kremlin’s ambitious plan to build new bases, ports, fuel depots and floating ice stations in the Arctic to secure the emerging Northern Sea Route.

As Arctic ice melts with the warming global climate, a previously frozen passage is now navigable about half the year. Russia has made control of the new shipping lanes a priority, seeking United Nations recognitio­n of the undersea territory as its exclusive national zone and budgeting tens of billions of dollars for nuclearpow­ered ships to patrol and service the route.

Canada, Denmark, the United States and other countries bordering the Arctic Circle are also vying for a piece of the potentiall­y lucrative shipping route.

SEW Director Dmitry Lisitsyn has vowed to fight the registrati­on order in court.

“SEW has protected the environmen­t of Sakhalin and its citizens’ environmen­tal rights for 20 years,” he told journalist­s in a statement last month from his office seven time zones east of Moscow. “We have much to be proud of. We have never engaged in politics.”

None of the 20 or so NGOs waging legal battles against their orders to register as foreign agents or disband after being immobilize­d with the “undesirabl­e” label have prevailed in court.

If the Justice Ministry’s decision isn’t repealed, Lisitsyn said, his group will consider shutting down.

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