THE WORLD
In Russia, Pro-Democracy Groups Hear Tick-Tick-Tick
By Kim Murphy
Times Staff Writer
November 19, 2005
MOSCOW — Employees of Open Russia, the nonprofit, pro-democracy
charitable foundation established by jailed oil billionaire Mikhail
Khodorkovsky, came to work one morning in October to find a police bus
parked outside, along with two minivans marked "Prosecutor General's
Office."
A dozen investigators swarmed out of the buses and proceeded to
seal off the building. Authorities said they were looking for evidence
of money laundering. But foundation directors came to believe they were
being targeted for something else: promoting an independent electorate
and a free press.
The detectives left 10 hours later, loaded with all the data
from the foundation's computers and five bags of documents.
But there was little new evidence to find. Open Russia, one of the
instruments of Khodorkovsky's campaign to end government repression,
already had been the subject of 21 different government examinations in
the last two years.
"Tax inspections. Ministry of Justice inspections. Social Security
Fund inspections. Labor inspections. Anybody who can control anybody
was here to control us," said program director Irina Yasina.
Then the government brought out the big guns. Russia's parliament
on Wednesday is scheduled to consider a bill that would dramatically
increase government supervision over an estimated 400,000 foundations
and impose new restrictions that could put Open Russia and hundreds of
other groups out of business.
Many analysts say the bill is a cornerstone in the Kremlin's move
to control virtually all levels of public discourse. In what many see
as a step back toward the Soviet era, President Vladimir V. Putin has
moved to centralize his authority over parliament, the media, courts
and regional governments. The proposed legislation would add to the
list one of the last independent sectors in public life — civil
institutions.
Its chief target, analysts said, is nongovernmental organizations
funded by the West that promote democracy, and that the Kremlin
perceives as encouraging an Orange Revolution-style uprising, like the
kind that toppled the governments of neighboring Ukraine and Georgia.
Already, millions of dollars in U.S. Agency for International
Development grants earmarked for democracy and good-government
foundations have been held up under separate regulations governing tax
exemptions.
In September, the former Moscow director of the U.S. National
Democratic Institute was blocked from entering the country. She was
admitted only after the U.S. Embassy intervened.
"The new draft law on NGOs is targeted at what is perceived to be
'revolutionary activity,' or the alleged role of foreign organizations
in instigating public protests and popular revolutions," said Yuri
Dzhibladze, president of the Moscow-based Center for the Development of
Democracy and Human Rights, which receives about a third of its funding
from USAID and the European Union.
Analysts said international organizations as diverse as Human
Rights Watch, the National Democratic Institute, and anti-AIDS and
environmental groups could in effect be prevented from operating in
Russia.
"Under this law it would be very questionable whether we would be
able to register our office in any form," said Diederik Lohman, senior
researcher for the New York-based Human Rights Watch.
Outside Russia, the legislation is considered by many to be a
retreat into isolationism at a time when Russia is scheduled to take
over chairmanship of the Group of 8 industrialized nations.
"It raises an almost unthinkable prospect — that the president of
Russia might serve as chairman of the G-8 at the same time that laws
come into force in this country to choke off contacts with global
society," former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) and former Housing and
Development Secretary Jack Kemp, who are leading a bipartisan task
force on U.S.-Russian policy for the Council on Foreign Relations, said
in a letter this week to President Bush.
But sponsoring legislators said the bill was aimed at businesses
trying to launder profits, extremist groups and foreigners seeking to
destabilize the political situation.
The legislation would allow the government, for example, to
restrict the activities of a foreign environmental group working near
secret Russian military installations, said co-sponsor Alexander
Chuyev, deputy chairman of the parliamentary Committee for
Nongovernment and Religious Organizations.
"I would not be surprised if a majority of employees of these
organizations was working for the interests of other countries," Chuyev
said.
In addition to requiring registration and oversight of all NGOs,
the bill would prohibit foreigners without residency permits from
working at NGOs and prevent foreign groups from operating in Russia
unless they could reinvent themselves as local organizations.
Open Russia could be closed under provisions prohibiting convicts
and people suspected of money laundering from founding NGOs:
Khodorkovsky was convicted this year of fraud and tax evasion, and is
also the subject of a separate $7-billion money laundering
investigation.
But Open Russia leaders believe the government's interest in the
organization has more to do with the group's work promoting a
democratic society. "We are trying to awaken in people a desire to
learn, to always know an alternative point of view," said Yasina, the
Open Russia chief.
The human rights group Memorial, which has sharply criticized
abuses by law enforcement and the military, also has been targeted.
Russian officials demanded an exhaustive series of tax inspections.
"They stayed on endlessly, were presented with everything they asked
for, then returned for more," said Oleg Orlov, Memorial's chairman.
Now, the organization has been told to expect a major claim for
allegedly unpaid taxes.
Officials have accused Western-funded NGOs of helping to mobilize
the student groups and activists who have toppled at least three
post-Soviet governments in the last three years.
"I don't think anyone's trying to promote an Orange Revolution in
Russia," said Catherine Osgood of the U.S.-based Freedom House, which
funds internships for Russian students in European think tanks and
NGOs. "I think the primary goal of foreign NGOs is to help strengthen
Russian civil society."
In an odd twist, the ruling United Russia party on Friday pushed
through a $17.4-million appropriation to fund NGOs promoting "civil
society and the development of democracy" in nations outside Russia.
"In a number of states, human rights are violated … including
violations during so-called Orange Revolutions, and Russia intends to
pursue a focused policy on these issues," Vladimir Pekhtin, deputy head
of the ruling party in parliament, said in an interview.
President Bush raised the NGO issue in a meeting with Putin on
Friday in South Korea, but national security advisor Stephen Hadley
later declined to elaborate. "It's a confidential discussion between
two leaders, and sometimes there are issues which can more productively
be discussed outside of public view," Hadley said.
Members of NGOs have urged the U.S. to take a strong stand.
"Maybe the goal of democracy can be put on a shelf, given all the
other burning issues the two countries have to discuss," said Andrei
Kortunov, president of the New Eurasia Foundation. "Or maybe they
believe this low-key approach is best. As someone told me, no one has
been put in jail. Nothing apocalyptic has happened yet. There's no
reason to bring in the heavy artillery yet."
Times staff writers Sergei L. Loiko and Natasha Yefimova in Moscow
and Peter Wallsten in Pusan, South Korea, contributed to this report.
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times