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UN Seeks Assurance Russian NGOs Won’t Face Reprisals


Graffiti saying "foreign agents. I love USA" is seen on the building used by used by the Memorial Human Rights Center in Moscow.
Graffiti saying "foreign agents. I love USA" is seen on the building used by used by the Memorial Human Rights Center in Moscow.
United Nations human rights experts have expressed concern that two Russian nongovernmental organizations that provided information for the UN Committee Against Torture have recently been charged by Russian authorities.

Russian prosecutors have charged the Antidiscrimination Center Memorial in St. Petersburg and the Public Verdict Foundation in Moscow with violating legislation that stipulates nonprofit groups involved in political activities register as "foreign agents" if they received funds from abroad.

The Committee Against Torture said on June 6 that the charges were based on extracts from the two groups’ submissions to the committee in November.

The committee asked the Russian ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Aleksei Borodavkin, for "urgent clarification."

It also sought reassurance that the two groups and other NGOs in Russia won’t face any reprisals "as a result of their legitimate activities."
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