Russian Official Defends NGO Checks to Council of Europe

MOSCOW, April 10 (RIA Novosti) – Russian Prosecutor General Yury Chaika defended recent inspections of Russian non-governmental organizations (NGOs) on Wednesday at a meeting with the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights Nils Muiznieks, Chaika’s office said.

A series of nationwide NGO inspections have taken place in Russia since March. Many critics – and indeed President Vladimir Putin himself, earlier this week – have linked them to a controversial new law, obliging non-governmental organizations financed from abroad and involved in political activity to register as “foreign agents.”

Russian Prosecutor General’s Office spokeswoman Marina Gridneva said Chaika told Muiznieks during the meeting “that under a law adopted late last year, non-governmental organizations are obliged to register with the Russian Justice Ministry as foreign agents.”

“However, not a single organization has registered so far, although they continue to receive financing from abroad. Chaika gave a number of actual examples,” she said, without giving the names of those organizations.

The prosecutor general said organizations that receive funding from abroad are not banned from working in Russia, but they should openly declare their sources of income.

On Tuesday, election monitoring non-governmental organization Golos (Voice) became the first NGO to face administrative measures under the recently introduced law on “foreign agents.”

Russia’s leading independent watchdog and its head Lilia Shibanova were accused of receiving funds from abroad, but failing to register as a “foreign agent.”

Shibanova replied that the organization has not received foreign funding since the law on “foreign agents” came into force last November.

 

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