Russia to pass foreign agent law to restrict media

Updated 17 July 2012
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Russia to pass foreign agent law to restrict media

MOSCOW: Russia could pass a law labeling media that gets funding from abroad as "foreign agents", a report said yesterday, after the Parliament approved a similar bill on NGOs.
The lower house, now on summer break, will begin its autumn session by discussing how to adapt the law on non-governmental organizations that it passed last week to fit media, lawmaker Ilya Kostunov of the United Russia party told Izvestia daily.
"I think the story with the foreign agents isn't over. A lot of media receive financial help from abroad and are mouthpieces of a foreign state," Kostunov told Izvestia, which has close links to the Kremlin.
"For a law on media we need to separately spell out the phrase 'foreign agents'," Kostunov said.
Another lawmaker, Vladimir Burmatov, suggested that media outlets including newspapers, magazines and websites could be classified as "foreign agents" if they received more than 50 percent of their budget from abroad.
"In that case the foreign patrons will practically be controlling the publication's editorial policy," he said.
The populist new law on NGOs, approved by the Duma last Friday, is expected to be passed by the Federation Council upper house on Wednesday and signed into law by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
It sparked outrage by implying that NGOs with foreign funding are involved in espionage. It also subjects "foreign agents" who fail to register to harsh penalties including closure for up to six months and jail for up to two years.
The report of plans to widen the legislation came after the lower house pushed through a number of bills seen as curbing the rights of the opposition.
The Federation Council will vote tomorrow on the NGO bill as well as on bills blacklisting websites and criminalizing slander.
The head of the presidential council on human rights, Mikhail Fedotov posted online a letter yesterday, he had sent to the upper house's speaker Valentina Matviyenko asking her to postpone the vote to allow more discussion. A law on discriminatory labelling for media would appear to target independent news outlets. Depending on its wording, it could also affect foreign-owned media.
"The logic of such a bill is perfectly clear to me. Everything seems to be escalating," a lawmaker for the opposition party A Just Russia who is prominent in the protest movement, Ilya Ponomaryov, told Izvestia.
Yet Parliament's deputy speaker, Sergei Zheleznyak, insisted to the Interfax news agency yesterday that the proposed law "was still at the stage of an idea."


Europol warns Iran crisis raises threat of terror, extremism and cyberattacks

Updated 4 sec ago
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Europol warns Iran crisis raises threat of terror, extremism and cyberattacks

  • Oorth said groups linked to Iran could seek to carry out “destabilising activities” within the EU
  • “The level of terrorist threat and violent extremism in EU territory is considered high“

MADRID: The Middle East conflict will have “immediate repercussions” for European Union security with an increased threat of terrorism, serious and organized crime as well as violent extremism and cyberattacks, European police body Europol told Spanish news agency EFE on Thursday.
Europol spokesman Jan Op Gen Oorth said he expected to see more cyberattacks against European infrastructure and an increase in online fraud using increasingly sophisticated Artificial Intelligence and exploiting the flurry of information swirling about the ⁠conflict online, EFE ⁠reported.
Groups linked to Iran could seek to carry out “destabilising activities” within the EU, he added, referring to groups linked to the so-called Axis of Resistance, the network of anti-American and Israeli Shiite militias in countries including Iraq, Lebanon ⁠and Yemen. These could include terrorist attacks, intimidation campaigns, terrorist financing and cybercrime.
“The level of terrorist threat and violent extremism in EU territory is considered high,” he told the news agency.
The terror threat could be heightened by individuals acting alone or small cells acting on their own initiative, he said.
“The rapid spread of polarizing content on the Internet can accelerate short-term radicalization processes ⁠among ⁠diaspora communities within the EU and other individuals,” he said.
Europol did not immediately return a Reuters request for comment on the reported statements.
Iran and Israel on Thursday were exchanging fire on a sixth day of war after Israel and the United States launched joint air strikes on Iran on the weekend. So far the attacks have killed more than 1,000 people including Iran’s Supreme Leader, prompted Iran to attack neighbors including Qatar and UAE along with energy shipments.