Freedom of Assembly in Russia in 2016. Review of Legislation and Law Enforcement

Criminalisation of the protest continues in Russia: the legislation is moving towards the creation of lists of the undesirable and the unreliable, which, probably, will soon be arrested simply for being in these lists. The so-called “Yarovaya Package”1 is a serious attempt to equate the authorities’ criticism not with extremism, but with terrorism, and at the same time solve the problem of competition of other faiths and practices with the Russian Orthodox Church.

Detentions of single pickets, subsequent fines, and sometimes arrests have become a common practice all over Russia. Prohibitions and revocation of approvals (a method not existing in the law) on holding public events obviously affect either  certain social and political groups (LGBT, non-organised opposition) or social protest when it acquires mass forms (truckers’ movement). Attacks against organisers of events, meetings, discussions, being held by both anonymous and so-called non-anonymous “patriots” are estimated in dozens, and few from them are being investigated. Separately it is worth noting the increase in attacks and attempts to disrupt events in closed premises – exhibitions, presentations, and concerts. We are witnessing more cases of using the Criminal Code against freedom of assembly, which leads, among other consequences, to the forced emigration of activists. The accepted course causes the final ousting of the critics of the regime not only from the streets, but also from any sites. The public grounds themselves are placed in a complicated position in one way or another. The population’s reaction to such actions is obvious. The number of uncoordinated actions, including those relatively radical in nature (road blocking), is growing. The territory of the Crimea peninsula is used to rehearse the “final” prohibitive schemes, the application of which should be expected in the next two years, and especially in the year of the election of the president of the Russian Federation.

Alexey Kozlov

legal-dialogue.org

super

Recent Posts

NGOs responses to coronavirus pandemic spell lasting changes for the sector

Alexey Kozlov is a veteran of the non-profit sector with over 25 years of experience…

4 years ago

Russian actor sentenced to 3.5 years in prison, after National Guard officer dislocates shoulder while arresting him at protest

Moscow Tverskoy District Court Judge Alexey Krivoruchko has sentenced Pavel Ustinov, a young up-and-coming actor,…

5 years ago

Political prisoners: events in Warsaw

Russian political prisoners in 2019 and the role for the OSCE Convenor: Human Rights Center "Memorial" Working…

5 years ago

Сотрудники силовых структур пришли с обысками в штабы Навального в более чем 40 городах

В штабах Навального начались обыски. Они идут в более 40 городах России, сообщил бывший глава предвыборного штаба…

5 years ago

Russia blacklists ‘undesirable’ Ukrainian World Congress

The Ukrainian World Congress (UWC), the Canada-based assembly of Ukrainian communities abroad, has been branded an…

5 years ago

Activist from Ecodefense, under pressure from Russia’s ‘foreign agent’ law, flees to Germany

The head of a Russian environmental organization has been forced to flee to Germany to…

5 years ago