Russia looks to counter US influence
The powerful chief of Russia’s equivalent to the FBI on Monday called for sweeping new rights restrictions, including curbing Internet freedoms and making it illegal to question Moscow’s annexation of
The powerful chief of Russia’s equivalent to the FBI on Monday called for sweeping new rights restrictions, including curbing Internet freedoms and making it illegal to question Moscow’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine. The head of Russia’s investigative committee Alexander Bastrykin backed a radical crackdown citing the need to counteract the “destructive” influence of the United States.
“It’s time to stop playing at pseudo-democracy, following pseudo-liberal values,” argued the official in charge of the country’s most high-profile criminal investigations in a comment piece in Kommersant Vlast weekly.
Calling for Russia to impose a strong national ideology, he condemned “falsification of information on historical facts” and proposed outlawing any criticism of Russia’s controversial annexation of Crimea in 2014.
Russia should amend its extremism legislation to include “denial of the results of a public referendum,” he said, likening this to an existing ban on Nazi propaganda.
Russia is struggling with a “hybrid war, unleashed by the US and its allies” and has entered a phase of “open confrontation,” he said.
He accused the US of funding the Opposition parties that openly criticise the Kremlin, stirring up the recent fighting in breakaway Nagorny Karabakh and destabilising the West Asia by backing rebels in Syria.
“I feel it is time to put up an effective barrier against this information war. We need a harsh, appropriate and symmetrical response,” Mr Bastrykin said.
Mr Bastrykin praised China’s blocks on websites of foreign media to “defend the national information space” and proposed that “to a reasonable degree we could very well add this experience to our armoury in Russia.”
