Russian vote monitor hit with big fine ahead of polls

19 Apr 2016 / 20:23 H.

    MOSCOW: Russia's independent election watchdog Golos said on Tuesday it had been fined a whopping 1.2 million rubles (RM70,464.38) for violating controversial legislation forcing non-governmental organisations to carry a "foreign agent" tag.
    Supporters and fellow rights activists said the fine — equivalent to US$18,300 or €16,150 — is believed to be the largest ever imposed on a Russian organisation for violating the notorious law and comes ahead of parliamentary polls in September.
    Following unprecedented protests against his decade-long rule, President Vladimir Putin in 2012 signed off on a law that requires non-governmental organisations which receive foreign funding to register with the authorities as "foreign agents".
    The legislation has caused huge concern among Russian NGOs that say the law has been designed to stigmatise them in the eyes of everyday Russians, and many organisations said they would not comply.
    Grigory Melkonyants of Golos said the organisation had been fined following a request from the justice ministry because some materials posted on its website did not carry an appropriate tag.
    Golos representatives had not been invited to take part in a court hearing last week, Melkonyants added, saying that their lawyer would contest the decision.
    He said Golos had asked the justice ministry three times to remove it from a list of foreign agents but had been refused every time. The vote monitor has been repeatedly harassed and fined in the past.
    Oleg Orlov of Memorial, one of Europe's most respected human rights organisations, said the aim of the authorities was to "eliminate" Golos which has exposed numerous electoral violations in the past.
    "It is obviously a directive from the above," he said, referring to a decision to slap the fine on the monitor.
    "The authorities are preparing to commit falsifications. Why do they need anyone to watch over them?"
    The September elections come as Russia is facing a prolonged economic crisis due in part to the plunge in oil prices and Western sanctions over the Kremlin's role in Ukraine.
    Putin has warned that "foreign enemies" were seeking to disrupt the elections and tasked the FSB security service with preventing any interference. — AFP

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