Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06MOSCOW10704
2006-09-25 09:25:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Moscow
Cable title:  

HUMAN RIGHTS OMBUDSMAN LUKIN ON NGO

Tags:  PREL PGOV PHUM KDEM SOCI RS 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO8670
PP RUEHDBU
DE RUEHMO #0704/01 2680925
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 250925Z SEP 06
FM AMEMBASSY MOSCOW
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2846
INFO RUCNCIS/CIS COLLECTIVE
RUEHXD/MOSCOW POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 MOSCOW 010704 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/RUS, DRL

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/22/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV PHUM KDEM SOCI RS
SUBJECT: HUMAN RIGHTS OMBUDSMAN LUKIN ON NGO
RE-REGISTRATION, DEMOCRACY ROUNDTABLE

REF: MOSCOW 9565

Classified By: Ambassador William J. Burns. Reasons: 1.4 (b) and (d).

-------
Summary
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 MOSCOW 010704

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/RUS, DRL

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/22/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV PHUM KDEM SOCI RS
SUBJECT: HUMAN RIGHTS OMBUDSMAN LUKIN ON NGO
RE-REGISTRATION, DEMOCRACY ROUNDTABLE

REF: MOSCOW 9565

Classified By: Ambassador William J. Burns. Reasons: 1.4 (b) and (d).

--------------
Summary
--------------


1. (C) In a September 22 meeting with the Ambassador, Human
Rights Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin endorsed moving forward on
the proposed U.S.-Russian roundtable on democracy and human
rights, and said he was prepared to discuss modalities when
in Washington October 10-12. Lukin offered to intercede on
behalf of NGOs worried about excessive red tape in the
re-registration process mandated by the new NGO law and
concerned that they may have to cease program activities if
not fully re-registered by October 18. The problem of
corruption in Russia was best broached by the two presidents.
The antidotes to corruption in Russia, Lukin thought, were
good anti-trust legislation, a government willing to enforce
the law, and political will. Lukin also mentioned recent
ethnic violence in Kondopoga (Karelia) as a by-product of
globalization, societal factors, and inaction by the local
authorities.

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U.S.- Russian Roundtable on Democracy
and Human Rights: A Good Idea
--------------


2. (C) Lukin told Ambassador that Presidential Advisor
Prikhodko had agreed for the Administration to an
expert-level, non-governmental roundtable on democracy and
human rights. Lukin was prepared to travel to the U.S.
October 10-12 to develop the idea further. He thought he
might have an opportunity to discuss the roundtable with
President Putin in early October.

-------------- ---
NGO Re-registration: Lukin Willing to Intercede
-------------- ---


3. (C) The Ambassador summarized for Lukin Federal
Registration Service (FRS) Director Movchan's August 30
assertion (reftel) that NGOs, which had submitted their
documents but were not re-registered by the October 18
deadline, would be allowed to continue operations. Since
that meeting, some NGOs had been told by the FRS that they

would have to suspend all but internal operations after
October 18 until re-registered by the FRS. (Note: In a
September 19 meeting with Embassy representatives and a
private-sector lawyer, FRS Director of Registration of
Political Parties, NGOs, and Other Organizations Zhafyarov
contended that NGOs not registered by October 18 would indeed
have to halt all but internal operations, and produced a
two-page document, which he said had just been posted on the
FRS website, to buttress his claim.)


4. (C) Lukin said that several Russian human rights NGOs had
expressed similar concerns. His office was soliciting input
on the re-registration process in the regions. Lukin noted
several potential stumbling blocks in the process: confusion
about the October 18 deadline, an excessively bureaucratic
process which "sometimes looks as if someone is asking for a
bribe" and, "frankly," the "absence of order in the approach
of some organizations" to the re-certification process.
Lukin asked that the affected NGOs make their complaint to
his office in writing, and he would endeavor to intercede
with the FRS.

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Corruption: USG Should Broach Subject
at the Highest Levels
--------------


5. (C) Lukin agreed with Ambassador that corruption was a
serious problem, and suggested that the solution lay in good
anti-trust legislation administered by an "impartial"
government possessing the requisite political will to tackle
the problem. The best way for the USG to approach the GOR,
Lukin thought, would be if the two presidents engaged in a
"constructive, practical" exchange of opinions. Much depended
on the leadership, Lukin thought, noting that corruption in
the Soviet Union was less widespread when Andropov --"a
personally modest man"-- was General Secretary, then had been
the case under other Soviet leaders.

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Local, Global Factors Contribute to

MOSCOW 00010704 002 OF 002


Ethnic Violence in Russia
--------------


6. (C) In a September 22 conversation with Ambassador, Human
Rights Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin sourced recent ethnic unrest
in the town of Kondopoga (Karelia) both to "deeper, societal
causes" and to failures by the local police and the Kondopoga
city administration. (Note: A mid-September barroom brawl
resulting in several deaths in Kondopoga was portrayed in the
press and by rightist, anti-immigrant groups as the
by-product of tensions between Slavs and "outsiders" from the
Caucasus.) Lukin, who had traveled to Kondopoga to
investigate in the wake of the September violence, described
to Ambassador the sequence of events as he understood them
and noted with approval that four criminal cases had been
opened there, including one against the local police force,
which had "done nothing" to stop the violence. Lukin traced
the incident to "the weakness of the police and of the local
administration" in Kondopoga, but added that a relatively
high local unemployment rate (5.2 percent) may have added
fuel to the fire.


7. (C) In response to questions from the Ambassador, Lukin
admitted that extremism of all kinds is increasing. He
thought the media played a role in fanning the flames but,
noting similar incidents in other countries, suggested that
globalization and migration were contributing factors. Lukin
believed that President Putin was worried about the problem,
and was looking to "civilized patriotism" as an antidote to
extremism. Some in Russia, Lukin noted parenthetically, saw
extremism as the inevitable by-product of a "refusal to adopt
international values."

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Comment
--------------


8. (C) It was clear in his conversation with the Ambassador
that Lukin understood the importance of allowing NGOs not
successful in clearing all hurdles to re-registration before
October 18 to remain in business. Ambassador has brought NGO
uncertainties about the re-registration process to the
attention of Duma Speaker Gryzlov and Duma Chairman of the
International Relations Committee Kosachev. He plans within
the next week to reinforce NGO concerns with Chairwoman of
the Presidential Council for Human Rights Panfilova and
Deputy Foreign Minister Yakovenko. Embassy has brought its
concerns about the varying interpretations of the October 18
deadline directly to the attention of the FRS, and is
currently working through the American Chamber of Commerce to
have NGOs petition Lukin's office. (Septel will offer a
scorecard of the current state-of-play among re-registering
international NGOs.)
BURNS