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Russian authorities say minors are being encouraged to commit suicide by taking part in an online "game" driven by Russian-language hashtags, including "blue whale." (file photo)
Russian authorities say minors are being encouraged to commit suicide by taking part in an online "game" driven by Russian-language hashtags, including "blue whale." (file photo)

Russian lawmakers have given preliminary approval to a bill that that would enable courts to imprison people convicted of using the Internet to encourage minors to commit suicide.

The bill was passed in the second of three votes in the State Duma, Russia's lower house of parliament, on May 24.

The bill would make attracting children younger than 18 to online games deemed to propagate suicide punishable by up to three years in prison.

Persuading children to commit suicide, via the Internet or otherwise, would carry a prison term of up to seven years in prison.

A separate bill, also approved in the second reading, obliges state media regulator Roskomnadzor to inform the Interior Ministry about websites propagating suicide within 24 hours of such websites being found.

The bills are a response to concerns about a shadowy phenomenon known as Blue Whale.

Authorities in Russia and other former Soviet republics say teenagers and younger children are being encouraged to commit suicide through participation in an online "game" driven by Russian-language hashtags, including "blue whale."

Critics of such legislation say no deaths in the region have been definitively tied to Blue Whale.

They contend that officials should be tackling factors that drive young people's interest in such games rather than tightening government control over the Internet.

With reporting by TASS and Interfax
After defending officials from an opposition party, Tajik lawyer Buzurgmehr Yorov was himself convicted on terror-related charges. (file photo)
After defending officials from an opposition party, Tajik lawyer Buzurgmehr Yorov was himself convicted on terror-related charges. (file photo)

Tajik authorities have launched an "unrelenting assault" against lawyers, particularly those who took up the defense of government critics, a rights watchdog says.

In a report released on May 24, Amnesty International says lawyers in Tajikistan are confronted with significant obstacles in the exercise of their professional duty as the country is increasingly turning its back on human rights and the rule of law.

"The effect of the harassment and the persecution of lawyers in Tajikistan, combined with the recent drastic reduction in the number of the registered lawyers, is crippling for the respect for rights in the country given the essential role lawyers play in the protection of human rights and in facilitating access to justice for all," Maisy Weicherding, a Central Asia researcher for Amnesty International, told RFE/RL.

The report -- In The Line Of Duty: Harassment, Prosecution And Imprisonment of Lawyers In Tajikistan -- comes ahead of the country's Professional Day of the Lawyer on May 26.

It says there is an ongoing crackdown by the Tajik government on "virtually all forms of dissent, including persecution of those associated or perceived to be associated with various banned opposition groups and political parties," including the Islamic Renaissance Party (IRPT) and Group 24.

'Unprecedented Risks'

The report says that many of the lawyers who took up the defense of members of the opposition have themselves faced persecution, including punitive arrest and lengthy prison terms following unfair trials.

The crackdown has also seen several lawyers charged with national security-related offences, thrown behind bars, and their family members harassed and intimidated, it adds.

Being a lawyer, particularly a human rights lawyer, "comes with unprecedented risks" in Tajikistan, according to Amnesty International.

In its report, the London-based rights watchdog describes several cases of Tajik lawyers who have faced persecution over the past few years:

  • Buzurgmehr Yorov and Nuriddin Mahkamov defended detained IRPT officials in 2015 after the party was outlawed by the Supreme Court as a "terrorist" organization. The two lawyers have since been convicted on controversial terrorism-related charges and sentenced to terms of more than 20 years. Fearing government reprisals, few lawyers were prepared to defend Yorov and Mahkamov after their arrest. Lawyer Muazzamakhon Kadirova took up their case but she was forced to flee the country after learning she faced imminent arrest.

  • Human rights lawyer Shuhrat Kudratov, who has worked on a number of politically "sensitive" cases, defended Zaid Saidov, a former cabinet minister who was sentenced to 26 years in prison in 2013 on charges that included corruption and rape. The lawyer himself was imprisoned on charges of bribery and fraud that he claimed were politically motivated and linked to his work as Saidov's defense lawyer. Kudratov believed his client was targeted in retaliation for his attempt to set up a political party and run for president.

The arbitrary arrest of these lawyers and their politically motivated prosecutions have served as a warning for other members of the profession in Tajikistan, according to Weicherding.

Harassment and the persecution of the lawyers "acted as a deterrent to any lawyer who was thinking of taking up politically sensitive cases," she said. "For example, the family of Buzurgmehr Yorov have not been able to find any criminal lawyer willing to take up his defense."

The report points out that "in the context of the wider clampdown on dissent, lawyers have become increasingly wary of taking up any cases of an overtly political, or potentially political, nature, or cases that involve complaints against security services or other agents of the state, even when there are compelling allegations of torture or other ill-treatment."

Weicherding says that the Tajik government "has turned its attention to lawyers and launched an unrelenting assault that has drastically reduced their numbers and limited their independence."

Limited Access To Justice

In 2015, Tajikistan adopted amendments to the law regulating licensing requirements for lawyers, bringing the process back under the control of the Ministry of Justice, and not under the Union of Lawyers as required under international standards.

According to Amnesty International, the number of licensed lawyers in Tajikistan has fallen by more than half in the past two years – from 1,200 in 2015 to just 600 today -- consequently restricting further the already limited access to justice for all citizens in Tajikistan.

It says that in Tajikistan -- a country where fundamental freedoms barely exist and where government critics are incarcerated and independent media silenced -- lawyers play an essential role in defending those whose rights are under attack.

The rights group calls on the Tajik government "to free those lawyers currently being held behind bars after being convicted in unfair trials and to urgently review the legislation that has caused the disbarment of more than half of their profession in the past two years."

It also urges Tajik authorities to respect human rights, including those of lawyers, saying "all lawyers in Tajikistan must be able to perform their professional duties without hindrance and fear of reprisals."

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