Changes
that are in line with changes towards authoritarianism everywhere,
but within Russia's historical tradition.
They
are under attack from the West.
Russia's
parliament votes to expand definition of high treason
Russia's
parliament on Tuesday voted to expand the country's definition of
high treason in a move that critics said meant any Russian citizen
who had contacts with a foreigner could be accused of trying to
undermine the state.
23
October, 2012
The
proposed changes - that still need to be approved by the upper house
of parliament and President Vladimir Putin before they become law -
redefine high treason to include "granting financial, technical,
consulting or other help" to those seeking to damage Russia's
security, including its "constitutional system, sovereignty,
territorial and state integrity."
The
vote follows Putin's return to the presidency in May which was
preceded by the biggest anti-Putin protests of his 12-year rule. The
Kremlin has pushed a raft of laws through parliament since May that
opposition politicians and activists have described as a tough
crackdown on dissent.
The
parliament's lower chamber, or Duma, voted 375-2 to expand the
definitions of high treason and espionage and to introduce prison
terms of up to eight years for illegally obtaining secret state
information.
The
opposition Just Russia party said it opposed the changes, saying such
a wide definition of high treason meant "almost any Russian
citizen with any contacts with any foreigner" could be accused
of betraying the state.
Rights
activists have warned that the law could be used to sanction anyone
who incurs the wrath of the authorities.
"This
law is designed for arbitrary interpretation," said Alexander
Cherkasov, an activist at the rights group Memorial.
"Imagine
they will start taking all this seriously and apply all these laws to
everybody. This would mean writing off all social and political life
as well as international ties."
Recently
approved legislation hikes fines for protesters and forces
foreign-sponsored non-governmental organizations to register as
"foreign agents", a term echoing the Cold War era.
Russia's
Human Rights Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin, who was originally appointed
by Putin, sided with the treason bill's critics, saying it
contradicted international law and Russia's constitution by choosing
a definition that was too broad to fairly determine a person's guilt.
The
proposal also adds multinational organizations to a list of bodies
that could benefit from state secrets. Previously, the list had only
named the governments and organizations of foreign states.
"In
obtaining information constituting a state secret in regard to the
Russian Federation various international organizations may act in
their own interests or for the benefit of secret services of various
foreign countries," a document explaining the proposed changes
read.
It
also mentioned unspecified attempts by various international
organizations to obtain Russia's state secrets "by illegal
means".
Moscow
ordered the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to
close at the start of this month, accusing Washington of using its
international aid mission in Russia to meddle in Russian politics and
influence elections.
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