Russia Labels Group Protecting Rights Of Volga Region's Indigenous Peoples 'Undesirable'

Free Idel-Ural was established by exiled activists from the Volga region in Kyiv.

The Russian Prosecutor-General's Office has declared the Ukrainian-registered nongovernmental organization Free Idel-Ural, which seeks to protect the rights of indigenous ethnic groups in the Volga region, as "undesirable."

The Prosecutor-General's Office announced its decision on February 18, saying the group is Ukrainian because it is registered in Kyiv and that it "poses a danger to the Russian Federation's constitutional order and security."

Free Idel-Ural was established by exiled activists from the Volga region. It says on its website that it represents the interests of the native ethnic groups in the Russian republics of Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Udmurtia, Mordovia, Chuvashia, and Mari El.

In recent years, Russia has been ratcheting up pressure on activists and groups involved in promoting more autonomy for the country's many ethnic groups.

It has banned more than a dozen foreign groups under legislation against "undesirable organizations," adopted in 2015. Under the law, groups are typically first labelled "undesirable" and then formally banned by the Justice Ministry.

In 2020, well-known Bashkir activist Airat Dilmukhametov, who had called for creating "a real federation" that encompasses all ethnic groups in Russia, was sentenced to nine years in prison on "extremism" charges that he and his supporters have called politically motivated.

The same year, the Supreme Court of Russia's Bashkortostan region labeled as "extremist" and banned the prominent Bashqort group, which for years promoted the Bashkir language and culture, as well as equal rights for ethnic Bashkirs.