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Sova Director Aleksandr Verkhovsky
Sova Director Aleksandr Verkhovsky

Russian authorities are investigating Sova Center, a respected research organization that tracks hate crimes and extremist movements in Russia, in connection with a controversial law on “undesirable organizations,” a move that could severely curtail its work.

The Moscow-based nonprofit said in a statement September 7 that the Moscow Prosecutor-General's Office had opened its probe after Sova published links to its past funders, including organizations that had been labeled “undesirable,” such as the U.S.-based National Endowment for Democracy.

“The prosecutor's office considers the posting of such links to be a form of distribution of illegal materials in the sense of the law on ‘undesirable organizations,’” the organization said.

"Sova Center has never concealed its donors, and linking to their websites was considered simply following etiquette, as the link only gives the reader awareness of the material, but does not directly spread it. However, in the current situation, Sova Center has been forced to remove these links," it said.

Asked why authorities had taken this move, Sova’s director, Aleksandr Verkhovsky, said: “I have no idea.”

“And this worries me. Because if the intention here is to put serious pressure on us, then it’s an open question what thoughts might appear in their heads next,” he said in a message to RFE/RL via Facebook.

Known for its research into hate crimes, extremist groups and, more broadly, into the growth in xenophobia in Russia, Sova is the latest in a series of nongovernmental organizations to face pressure from authorities.

A law passed two years ago gave Russian officials the ability to classify foreign nongovernmental organizations as “undesirable” if they’re deemed to pose a threat to Russia’s “constitutional order, defense potential, or state security.”

The move has driven major U.S. and other Western organizations that have funded Russian civil society groups out of the country, including the National Endowment for Democracy, which gets funding from the U.S. Congress, as well as private philanthropies like the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and the MacArthur Foundation, and smaller groups like Crimean Field Mission on Human Rights.

That law followed an earlier one, in 2012, that created a legal category called “foreign agent,” allowing prosecutors to classify organizations as such if they get funding from outside of Russia.

Both measures have been seen as a deliberate effort by officials to clamp down on civil society groups and independent organizations in Russia.

RFE/RL correspondent Carl Schreck contributed to this report
Darya Polyudova
Darya Polyudova

An activist who is serving time over Internet posts criticizing Russia's actions in Ukraine is being mistreated in prison, her mother says.

Darya Polyudova's mother, Tatyana Polyudova, told RFE/RL on September 7 that her daughter went on a hunger strike on August 31 to protest conditions at the prison where she is being held but had to stop after several days due to medical problems.

The prison director had warned Polyudova that she would be forcibly fed if she did not stop the hunger strike, her mother said.

She said it was her daughter's third hunger strike since she was sent to the prison in the southern city of Novorossiisk.

Tatyana Polyudova said her daughter has been subjected to physical attacks and other abuse by fellow inmates and suspects that the prison authorities are behind the mistreatment.

There was no immediate comment from prison officials.

Polyudova was sentenced to two years in prison in 2015 after being convicted of propagating extremism and separatism online.

She had been charged in 2014 over Internet posts in which she criticized the Russian government for its support of separatists in eastern Ukraine, where fighting that erupted in April of that year has killed more than 10,000 people.

The Moscow-based Memorial human rights center has designated Polyudova a political prisoner.

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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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