The Guardian (USA)

Russian court orders closure of another human rights group

- Andrew Roth in Moscow

A Russian court has ordered the closure of the Memorial Human Rights Centre (MHRC), a day after the supreme court revoked the legal status of its sister organisati­on, Memorial Internatio­nal.

Moscow city court authorised the dissolutio­n of the group – one of Russia’s most venerated human rights institutio­ns – for the “justificat­ion of extremism and terrorism” by religious groups including Jehovah’s Witnesses officially considered “extremist” in Russia.

MHRC has said it plans to appeal against the decision in the European court of human rights.

On Wednesday evening, Memorial Internatio­nal published a letter from the European court ordering Russia to suspend its decision to dissolve MHRC and Memorial Internatio­nal, pending a legal review of Russia’s “foreign agent” legislatio­n. Russia’s response to the decision, which it is treaty-bound to enforce, is not yet clear.

The head of MHRC, Alexander Cherkasov, said he believed the decision to liquidate it was politicall­y motivated and that the Russian government was acting to suppress civil rights. The group had also named Alexei Navalny, an opposition leader, as a political prisoner. His nationwide organisati­on was declared extremist earlier this year.

On Tuesday, Russia’s supreme court dissolved Memorial Internatio­nal, founded by dissidents in the 1980s to research the Stalin-era repression­s of millions of Soviet citizens.

The court orders conclude a year in which there has been an unpreceden­ted assault on civil liberties in Russia, as opposition activists have been jailed or driven into exile, while dozens of media outlets and NGOs have been declared foreign agents or liquidated outright.

Memorial Internatio­nal said in a statement it would “find legal ways to continue our work”, which include researchin­g and popularisi­ng informatio­n about Soviet atrocities.

“Memorial is not just an organisati­on, nor just a social movement,” the statement said. “Memorial is the demand of Russian citizens for the truth of its tragic past, about the fates of many millions of people. And this demand cannot be ‘liquidated’ by anyone.”

The Council of Europe commission­er for human rights, Dunja Mijatović, called the ruling a “deplorable move that will have significan­t negative consequenc­es for human rights protection in Russia”. She also criticised Russia’s “foreign agents” law for having a “repressive character”.

European government­s have also criticised Russia’s attempt to close down its oldest human rights organisati­ons. The UK foreign secretary, Liz Truss, said Memorial’s closure was “another chilling blow to freedom of expression in Russia” and that she was “deeply concerned”.

A spokespers­on for the UN human rights office told AFP that Memorial’s forced closure and the actions of the court “further weaken the country’s dwindling human rights community”.

 ?? Wednesday. Photograph: Mikhail Tereshchen­ko/Tass ?? Alexander Cherkasov, centre, the head of the Memorial Human Rights Centre, talks to journalist­s outside the Moscow city court on
Wednesday. Photograph: Mikhail Tereshchen­ko/Tass Alexander Cherkasov, centre, the head of the Memorial Human Rights Centre, talks to journalist­s outside the Moscow city court on

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