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Valentina Cherevatenko, head of the Women of the Don Union NGO
Valentina Cherevatenko, head of the Women of the Don Union NGO

A human rights activist in southern Russia's Rostov region has become the first person to face criminal prosecution under the country's controversial "foreign agent" law.

Human rights activist Valentina Cherevatenko told news site Mediazona that she was formally charged on June 2 with intentionally avoiding registration of her NGO, Women of the Don Union, as a foreign agent.

If convicted, Cherevatenko could be sentenced to two years in prison.

Amnesty International said her case is "emblematic of the deeply repressive approach the Russian authorities are taking towards independent civil society organizations."

Cherevatenko's NGO was added to the Justice Ministry's list of foreign agents in 2014. The authorities claim Cherevatenko's NGO was involved in politics and received finances from abroad, conditions that require registration as a foreign agent.

Members at a rally in Rostov-on-Don in support of Cherevatenko
Members at a rally in Rostov-on-Don in support of Cherevatenko

Cherevatenko says her organization has never received money from abroad or was involved in politics. She says the case against her is a retaliation for her project A Civil Minsk, which monitors implementation of the Minsk deal to end the conflict between Ukrainian government forces and Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

Authorities launched a criminal case against Cherevatenko in June 2016.

Hours before Cherevatenko was charged, Amnesty International said that she was being targeted because of her dedication to human rights work.

Her prosecution "sends a strong signal to all Russian NGOs that their staffs could face arbitrary charges and prison for simply accepting foreign funding for their important human rights work,” said Denis Krivosheyev, the group's deputy director for Europe and Central Asia.

In a statement, EU foreign-policy chief Federica Mogherini’s office said the practice of declaring NGOs as foreign agents “restricts civil society and impedes the exercise of fundamental freedoms.”

“Cherevatenko’s outstanding work on human rights education, peace building, and humanitarian issues is well-known and widely appreciated," the statement added.

With reporting by Mediazona
The French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo
The French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo

A prosecutor in Chechnya has asked a court to block websites that carrying content from the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which recently posted a lewd comic strip taking aim at the Russian region's Kremlin-backed leader over allegations of a campaign of abuse against gay men.

The regional prosecutor's office said on May 31 that the prosecutor in Chechnya's Shali district filed a request asking a court in the capital, Grozny, to restrict access to content in Charlie Hebdo that "aims to insult the religious sentiments of believers" and could incite hatred.

The statement did not name any specific website or specify what content it was referring to.

But in May, some websites and social networks posted material that included a Charlie Hebdo comic strip featuring caricatures mocking Chechen authorities and regional leader Ramzan Kadyrov over what rights groups and media reports say has been a gruesome campaign targeting men perceived to be gay.

One drawing in the comic appears to depict Kadyrov engaged in a sexual act.

Kadyrov said in May that Charlie Hebdo’s "editorial policy is immoral and inhuman...and has nothing to do with freedom of expression."

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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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