Melissa Hooper

Director of Europe and Eurasia Policy at Human Rights First

Mar 09, 2016
Russia’s Bad Example

Free Russia Foundation is honored to present the report “Russia’s Bad Example” by Melissa Hooper with assistance from Grigory Frolov.

Since the start of Vladimir Putin’s presidency in 2000, Russian authorities have been continuously reducing the public and legal space for civil society institutions, particularly human rights groups, NGOs, opposition movements, media outlets, and journalists.

However, since the beginning of his third term in 2012, the number of laws and policies restricting freedom of assembly and association, freedom of expression, the right to liberty and personal and information security has dramatically increased. Concerned by revolutionary actions in Ukraine and mass protest rallies on Bolotnaya and Sakharov squares in Moscow, the Russian leadership sent a clear message that any act of resistance will have serious legal and even criminal consequences, which has resulted in an unfortunate successful crackdown on Russian civil society.

Predictably, the effectiveness of these new laws, together with a very limited reaction by the international community, set a bad, but a popular example for other authoritarian-leaning regimes. For decades, Russia remained a country without an ideology to export. Now Putin’s Russia has realized that it can capitalize on its foreign policy goals of showing democratic discord and countering a universal human rights discourse by disseminating or at least promoting its unique system of suppression of opposition, NGOs and media.

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