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Russia's retreat
BY CATHY YOUNG | May 8, 2006
SPEAKING TO an audience at Harvard's Davis Center for Russian and
Eurasian Studies late last month, Russian journalist and activist
Irina Yasina recalled that her first visit to Harvard took place
15 years ago, at a time of tremendous change in her home country. "Russia
had just become a part of the world," she said meaning, of course,
the free democratic world. "Now, the change is happening in the other
direction."
Yasina, who spoke at one of the Sakharov seminars as part of the
Davis Center's Sakharov Program on Human Rights, has been in a position
to experience that change on her own skin. She is the program director
of the Open Russia Foundation, an organization that has supported
numerous initiatives to promote civil institutions, human rights,
and democratic reform in Russia (from educating journalists and politicians
about liberal principles to educating ordinary citizens about their
legal rights). The foundation was launched and financed by the now-imprisoned
Russian oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, whose prosecution on tax
fraud charges was generally regarded as a blatant move by Vladimir
Putin to squelch political opposition.
In March, the foundation's bank accounts were frozen by the Russian
government because of its connection to the jailed Khodorkovsky,
essentially putting an end to its operations. While the foundation
is appealing the order, the courts so far have sided with the government,
and few expect a favorable result. The foundation's staff and supporters,
said Yasina, had made a bitter joke of the fact that "Open Russia
is closed." In the bad old days, dark humor had been one of the few
ways Russians defied tyranny in private. Those days may be coming
back.
The Open Russia Foundation is not the only target. All independent
civic and political organizations, Yasina said, are threatened by
Russia's new law regulating nongovernmental organizations, which
took effect April 17. The law, widely seen as an effort to forestall
a Russian version of Ukraine's "Orange Revolution" that forced an
authoritarian government to resign, was amended before its final
passage as a result of criticism from the West. But the new version,
Yasina said, is bad enough.
Among other things, the legislation prohibits anonymous donations
to independent organizations; at any time, an organization can be
required to prove that its fund-raising doesn't come from "dirty
money." It can also be required to provide data on every single person
taking part in its activities; organizations that don't comply could
be shut down after a second violation.
How harshly will the law be enforced? Yasina believes that nonpolitical
private organizations, such as charities assisting the disabled or
foundations supporting the arts, are likely to get a break. However,
groups dealing with human rights or civic and political activism,
she predicted, "will have a very hard time." The situation is especially
dire because political opposition, and the media in Russia have already
been largely stifled.
A similarly bleak assessment was given a few days earlier at the
National Press Club in Washington, D.C., by Andrei Illarionov, a
former economic adviser to Putin who resigned last December saying
that Russia was no longer a democratic country. The topic of his
talk was the summit of the Group of Eight the leading industrialized
democracies in St. Petersburg, Russia, in July. The meeting, Illarionov
predicted, would herald "the death of the G-8," since Russia today
does not meet any of the criteria of an industrialized democracy.
Its recent record in political freedoms, judicial independence, and
corruption is abysmal.
Interestingly, Illarionov (who once played a vital role in getting
Russia accepted into the G-8) and Yasina both voiced the sentiment
that neither boycotting the St. Petersburg summit nor participating
in it was an optimal solution. A boycott would put Russia firmly
on the path of isolation and make it harder for the West to exert
any positive influence. Participation would amount to condoning Russia's
current policies. Perhaps the best answer would be for Western leaders
to attend and then use the summit as an opportunity to condemn Russia's
slide back toward tyranny. But such a breach of diplomatic protocol
is unlikely.
During the question period, Illarionov avoided answering a question
about whether he was himself afraid of retaliation for his outspokenness.
Yasina was more blunt: Three years ago, she said, she would have
laughed off such a question but today, the danger of being jailed
is nothing to laugh at.
In his 2004 book, "The Case for Democracy," former Soviet dissident
and now Israeli politician Nathan Sharansky draws a distinction between "free
societies" and "fear societies." It's pretty clear which side of
the divide Russia falls on now.
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