Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 19 – Igor Yakovenko
says that the decision of Russian prosecutors concerning a recent article by
Andrey Piontkovsky could have far-reaching consequences, quite possibly casting
doubt on the participation of the democratic opposition in the upcoming Duma
and presidential elections.
In a commentary in “Yezhednevny
zhurnal,” he reports that prosecutors have concluded that Piontkovsky’s
article, “A Bomb Ready to Go Off,” contains several statements and arguments
which fall under official understandings of Russia’s anti-extremism legislation
(ej.ru/?a=note&id=29353).
First, by suggesting
that Russians consider the possible separation of Chechnya from Russia,
Piontkovsky, the prosecutors say, is advancing an argument which represents “a
threat to the territorial integrity of the Russian Federation.”
Second, Yakovenko continues, “the
staff of the procuracy has discovered in [the Russian commentator’s text] the
denigration of the dignity” of people of different nationalities. And third,
these officials believe they sense words and arguments that threaten to “exacerbate”
hatred and hostility among peoples.
The procuracy has
transferred these materials to the FSB; and Piontkovsky has now left Russia.
But “besides [his] fate,” Yakovenko says, “this episode could have an
essential impact on the upcoming elections” by “making impossible the
participation in [them] of those who support democratic and liberal views and
recognize international law.”
“In the light of this latest
decision of the Procuracy General, now any demand to return Crimea to Ukraine,
even any proposal to discuss this issue at an international conference or to
subject this question to another referendum will be qualified as an
infringement on the territorial integrity of Russia and that means as
extremism,” Yakovenko continues.
Indeed, it is now possible that even
referring to the UN resolution on the territorial integrity of Ukraine adopted
on March 27, 2014 will be enough to bring charges of extremism; and “it is
possible that the list of international documents which can thus be classified
as extremism will grow longer in the near future.”
That list could even grow to
include, the Moscow commentator says, the 1994 Budapest Memorandum and other
international accords and agreements to which Russia itself is a signatory.
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