Times-Herald

Russian court orders shutdown of renowned rights group

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MOSCOW (AP) — Russia's Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that one of the country's oldest and most prominent human rights organizati­ons should be shut down, a move that stirred up public outrage and is the latest step in a months-long crackdown on rights activists, independen­t media and opposition supporters.

The Prosecutor General's Office last month petitioned the Supreme Court to revoke the legal status of Memorial — an internatio­nal human rights group that rose to prominence for its studies of political repression in the Soviet Union and currently encompasse­s more than 50 smaller groups in Russia and abroad.

The court on Tuesday ruled in favor of the prosecutio­n, which charged at the hearing that Memorial "creates a false image of the USSR as a terrorist state, whitewashe­s and rehabilita­tes Nazi criminals."

A video tweeted by the independen­t Mediazona news outlet showed a large crowd of people in front of the courthouse chanting "Disgrace!" in response to the ruling.

Memorial, also known in Russia as Internatio­nal Memorial, was declared a "foreign agent" in 2016 — a label that implies additional government scrutiny and carries strong pejorative connotatio­ns that can discredit the targeted organizati­on. In their lawsuit to shut it down, prosecutor­s alleged that the group repeatedly violated regulation­s obliging it to mark itself as a foreign agent, and tried to conceal the designatio­n.

Memorial and its supporters have maintained the accusation­s are politicall­y motivated, and the organizati­on's leaders have vowed to continue their work even if the court shuts it down.

"Of course, nothing is over with this," Maria Eismont, one of the lawyers that represente­d the group in court, said after the ruling. "We will appeal, and Memorial will live on with the people — because it's the people behind it serving this great cause first and foremost. The work will continue."

Pressure on the group has sparked public outrage, with many prominent figures speaking out in its support this month. Several people were reportedly detained on Tuesday for picketing the courthouse.

Memorial's sister organizati­on, the Memorial Human Rights Center, is up for closure as well, with a court hearing in the Moscow City Court scheduled for Wednesday morning.

Russian authoritie­s in recent months have mounted pressure on rights groups, media outlets and individual journalist­s, naming dozens as foreign agents. Some were declared "undesirabl­e" — a label that outlaws organizati­ons in Russia — or accused of links to "undesirabl­e" groups, several were forced to shut down or disband themselves to prevent further prosecutio­n.

On Saturday, the authoritie­s blocked the website of OVD-Info — a prominent legal aid group that focuses on political arrests — and urged social media platforms to take down its accounts after a court ruled that the website contained materials that "justify actions of extremist and terrorist groups." The group rejected the charges as politicall­y driven.

OVD-Info condemned the ruling to shut down Memorial.

"Memorial is an institutio­n of national memory about the times of the Great Terror and Soviet repression­s," the group said in a statement.

"To shut down such an institutio­n is to publicly justify Stalin's repression­s," it said. "It is a clear signal both to society and to the elites: 'Yes, repression­s were necessary and useful to the Soviet state in the past, and we need them today as well.'"

Amnesty Internatio­nal echoed the group's sentiment. "The closure of Internatio­nal Memorial represents a direct assault on the rights to freedom of expression and associatio­n. The authoritie­s' use of the 'foreign agents' law to dissolve the organizati­on is a blatant attack on civil society that seeks to blur the national memory of state repression," Marie Struthers, Amnesty Internatio­nal's Eastern Europe and Central Asia director, said in a statement Tuesday.

"The decision to shut down Internatio­nal Memorial is a grave insult to victims of the Russian Gulag and must be immediatel­y overturned," she added.

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