HELSINKI
COMMISSION LEADERS URGE PRESIDENT BUSH TO RAISE RUSSIAN RIGHTS CONCERNS
Helsinki Commission Leaders Urge President Bush
to Raise Russian Rights Concerns Putin Visit Opportunity to Press
for Progress
(Washington) - The United States Helsinki Commission
today released the text of a letter signed by Commission leaders
addressed to President George W. Bush in conjunction with Russian
President Vladimir Putin`s U.S. visit to attend the G8 Summit,
set to open a week from today, in Sea Island, Georgia.
As noted at a May 20th Helsinki Commission hearing,
President Putin is increasingly relying on the security-intelligence
apparatus to run Russia, with ominous consequences for human rights,
civil liberties and democratic progress. The leaders cited specific
concerns over the targeting of a number of Russian academics and
environmentalists; a ban on religious activities of Jehovah`s
Witnesses in the Russian capital; and egregious violations of
international humanitarian law in Chechnya.
Begin text.
May 28, 2004
The President
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500
Dear Mr. President:
We write urging you to raise human rights concerns
in the Russian Federation when you meet with President Putin at
the Sea Island G- 8 Summit. As noted at a recent Helsinki Commission
hearing, Mr. Putin is increasingly relying on the security-intelligence
apparatus to run Russia, with ominous consequences for human rights,
civil liberties and democratic progress.
One of the telling results has been what human
rights activists are calling ``spy mania,`` whereby a number of
academics and environmentalists have been accused of collaborating
with Western intelligence agencies on the basis of questionable
evidence and procedures. A case in point involves Igor Sutyagin,
a researcher from the U.S. and Canada Institute, recently sentenced
by a Moscow court to 15 years in hard labor for ``espionage.``
His ``crime`` was to pass scientific analyses based upon open
source material to associates abroad. While his is not an isolated
case, Sutyagin has received the harshest sentence to date. We
urge you to raise this case as well as the broader trend.
In another troubling trend, a recent Moscow municipal
court ruling effectively bans the religious activities of the
local community of Jehovah`s Witnesses in the Russian capital.
This case should set off alarm bells for members of other religious
minorities in Moscow and beyond. There has also been heightened
rhetoric by Russian officials with frequent references to so-
called ``traditional religions,`` which raises serious concerns
over the status of individuals belonging to ``minority`` religious
communities in Russia (many of whom have existed in Russia for
over a century).
Government pressure on electronic media outlets,
denunciations by government officials of human rights and pro-democracy
NGOs, and manipulations of elections give further rise for concern.
President Putin is well positioned to reverse these troubling
trends away from protection of human rights, civil liberties and
democratic progress and toward governance based upon the misguided
notion of so-called ``managed democracy.``
Finally, we reiterate longstanding concerns regarding
developments in Chechnya where the most egregious violations of
international humanitarian law anywhere in the OSCE region are
occurring. President Putin`s efforts to manipulate political developments
in Chechnya have failed to move the region toward normalization,
as evidenced by the recent assassination of his handpicked leader
for the region. Besides alleviating the grave humanitarian situation
in Chechnya, President Putin should move to allow the Chechen
people to have a voice and choice in their future, while preserving
the territorial integrity of the Russian Federation.
Mr. President, we urge you to set aside a portion
of your time with President Putin to discuss these particularly
disturbing developments in the Russian Federation.
Sincerely,
CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH, M.C.
Chairman
BEN NIGHTHORSE CAMPBELL, U.S.S.
Co-Chairman
BENJAMIN L. CARDIN, M.C.