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Russian police have searched the Moscow homes of at least two employees of the Library of Ukrainian Literature.

The lawyer for the library's director said police searched the homes of Anna Pavlenko and Tatiana Muntian early on December 14.

The Russian Investigative Committee said searches were also made in other apartments belonging to individuals who "did not work for the library, but were receiving salaries from it."

The library's director, Natalya Sharina, 58, was detained in late October and charged with inciting extremism and ethnic hatred.

She is being held under house arrest.

Russia's Investigative Committee said authorities had found books in Sharina's library by Ukrainian ultranationalist author Dmytro Korchynsky, whose works are banned in Russia.

Sharina rejected the charges, saying the books had been planted in her library by police.

Based on reporting by Interfax and TASS

WASHINGTON — Ukrainian activists say human rights violations are rampant in Crimea, the Russian-annexed peninsula of Ukraine, including people being forced to acquire Russian citizenship and intimidation of nationalists.

Activists spoke December 11 at a meeting of the U.S. Helsinki Commission, a U.S. government agency that monitors international adherence to the 1975 Helsinki Accords on human rights.

“The practice of human rights in occupied Crimea is dire and continues to deteriorate,“ said Ivanna Bilych, a Ukrainian lawyer and one of several authors of a report documenting problems on the Black Sea peninsula.

Russia annexed Crimea in March 2014, several weeks after long-running protests in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv turned violent and forced President Viktor Yanukovych to flee.

Bodhan Yaremenko, a former diplomat, called on the international community to keep in place the economic sanctions imposed by the United States and Еurope on Russia after the annexation.

Andriy Klymenko, a former economist and editor-in-chief of website Black Sea News, said authorities have been quick to tamp down any signs of Ukrainian nationalism.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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