Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 23 –Russian
President Vladimir Putin this week has signed a new law that holds regional and
local officials responsible for ethnic peace on their territories, an action
that simultaneously deflects responsibility from the Kremlin, gives the center
a whip hand over such officials, and likely forces them to take a harder line
on Moscow’s behalf.
But even as that law is going into
force and being debated – see, among others, svpressa.ru/society/article/76234/, grani.ru/Politics/Russia/President/m.220377.html and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5266DF09B27D1 – three other
pieces of legislation are going forward that is even more curious and more
disturbing.
First of all, the Duma has approved
on first and second reading a new government-backed law that will prevent
anyone condemned for extremism to create a new social or religious
organization, a measure that the KPRF has criticized for the risk that it will be
used against anyone the government doesn’t like (kommersant.ru/doc/2324176 ).
Deputy Justice Minister Yury
Lyubimov justifies this measure as a necessary step to ward of “threats to
national security.” But he was unable to
answer challenges from Communist deputy Anatoly Lokot about what mechanisms the
draft legislation has to ensure that “political criticism will not be equated
with extremism.”
Second, the Communists themselves,
KPRF head Gennady Zyuganov said, are planning to submit to the Duma sometime in
November a draft law that would impose criminal penalties, including jail time,
on anyone who called for the division of the Russian Federation into two or
more states (ingria.info/lenta/868-2013-10-19-09-35-24).
To be charged under its terms,
Zyuganov said, an individual or group would not have to take any action beyond
making a declaration about the disintegration of the Russian Federation as a
desirable goal. The KPRF leader aid that
he believes that “the citizens of the country will support us.”
And third, a Moscow city duma deputy
has proposed introducing into the Russian criminal code a provision that would
impose a fine of up to 40,000 rubles (1300 US dollars) as well as imprisonment
for up to a year for any insults directed at local officials (izvestia.ru/news/559211).
Other deputies said that such a
measure was necessary to protect local officials who are just doing their jobs
and would not in any way suppress political discourse. In its report, “Izvestiiya” quoted a retired
MVD colonel as saying that jail time wasn’t necessary; the imposition of fines
would be enough.
Those are just three pieces of
legislation wending their way through Moscow. Meanwhile, another development in
the legal sphere outside of Moscow is worth noting. Despite President Putin’s claims to have
restored “a common legal space” in Russia, officials in various regions are
interpreting Russian law in diametrically opposite ways.
The latest instance of this has to
do with the right of officials under Russian law to issue “preventive” warnings
to organizations and individuals. An official in Chuvashia says that such
warnings are illegal (sobkorr.ru/news/52666545B840A.html), but one in
Ryazan says they are not (sobkorr.ru/news/52665CCFCBD8D.html).
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