Posts Tagged ‘natalia pelevine’

15
November 2012

Andrei Sannikov: Today’s Russia threatens independence of Belarus

Charter 97

The leader of European Belarus civil campaign took part in a discussion in the UK parliament.

Adoption of the Magnitsky Act can become a serious precedent for applying international pressure on the governments of Russia and other countries with blatant human rights violations. The universal jurisdiction of the act is vital, Andrei Sannikov, a former Belarusian presidential candidate and leader of European Belarus civil campaign, said at a roundtable discussion held in the UK Parliament on November 14.

“The Russian authorities follow in Lukashenka’s footsteps and carry out the methodical offensive against human rights and civil liberties. The strong international pressure, also by means of such legislative initiatives as the Magnitsky Act, should become an effective tool to counter impunity of officials. We cannot close our eyes on the dangerous processes in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine,” Andrei Sannikov said. He enlisted the names of Belarusian political prisoners and emphasised the necessity of taking urgent measures to save the lives of people suffering from incredible pressure in prisons.

Answering the question about threats from Russia, Andrei Sannikov said the Russia of today poses a threat to Belarus’s independence and noted the Russian leaders still had imperial ambitions and didn’t hide them saying about Russia’s “zones of influence” and “spheres of interests”.

The event in London, which was organised by the Russia Studies Centre at The Henry Jackson Society and Hermitage Capital, was held to commemorate the third anniversary of the death of Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian attorney who worked for Hermitage Capital Management company in 2007-2008. Sergei Magnitsky and his colleagues exposed corruption among Russian officials involved in takeovers of companies, jailing businessmen and large-scale tax evasion. Having been accused of tax frauds, Magnitsky was taken into custody and died on November 16, 2009, in notorious Matrosskaya Tishina detention centre in Moscow.

The event was attended by British prominent political and public figures – former Conservative MP Lord Norman Lamont, former minister of justice Jonathan Djanogly and Labour MP Chris Bryant; representatives of human rights groups Index on Censorship, ARTICLE 19, Reporters without Borders, the Norwegian Helsinki Committee, journalists of leading UK media and university professors.

The Magnitsky Act (Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act) is expected to be adopted by the US Congress to impose sanctions, including visa restrictions, on the Russian officials suspected of having relation to the prosecution and death of Sergei Magnitsky.

The Magnitsky Act may become the foundation for the legislative aid for the democratic movement in Russia. The judicial system in Russia serves either to the authorities or to the rich. The fate of Russian opposition leaders directly depends on the adoption of the Magnitsky Act, says Natalia Pelevine, the Democratic Russia Committee head. займ срочно без отказов и проверок займ на карту без отказов круглосуточно https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php https://zp-pdl.com/fast-and-easy-payday-loans-online.php payday loan

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23
March 2012

Moscow single-person pickets to protest against Magnitsky case resumption

Interfax

One-person pickets will be staged outside the Russian Interior Ministry on March 24 in protest over the re-opening of a criminal case against Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Moscow jail in 2009, For Democratic Russia committee activist Natalya Pelevina told Interfax.

Pelevina said that City Hall recently rejected her application for permission to hold a rally against such steps.

“Following City Hall’s denial, we decided to hold single-person pickets to protest against police arbitrariness in Sergei Magnitsky’s case. We will come to the Interior Ministry building in Moscow on March 24,” she said.

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20
March 2012

Moscow authorities prohibit rally calling for justice for Sergei Magnitsky

The Washington Post

City officials denied permission Monday for a rally on behalf of a lawyer who died in police custody in 2009, revealing deep sensitivity to a case that has provoked accusations of high-level corruption here and set off threats of sanctions as far away as Washington.

The death of Sergei L. Magnitsky has prompted debates in Congress and among lawmakers, human rights advocates and the Obama administration over how U.S. foreign policy should address trade issues and human rights abuses in Russia.

Moscow authorities have refused to allow a rally on Saturday calling for justice for Magnitsky, even as they have permitted a series of provocative demonstrations during which Russians shouted insults directed at Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, only recently an unimaginable situation.

“How can you say rallying for justice is wrong?” asked Natalia Pelevine, a playwright and activist who applied for the permit. “Justice is wrong?”

She said city officials, who could not be reached for comment Monday evening, told her that such a gathering would influence court proceedings.

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20
March 2012

City Hall Refuses Permission for Magnitsky Rally

The Moscow Times

Moscow City Hall has refused to grant permission for a March 24 protest against alleged police misconduct in the case of former Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, protest organizer Natalia Pelyevina said in an email to journalists.

Pelyevina, who is coordinator for the organization Committee for Democratic Russia, told Interfax that City Hall based the refusal on the grounds that the event “may influence the judicial process” in the Magnitsky case.

The group had planned an event for March 24 on Kaluzhskaya Ploshchad as a show of support for Magnitsky’s relatives and to protest what it called “police violence” in the case.

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21
December 2011

U.S. Congress holds hearings on human rights in Russia

Ekho Moskvy

This week the U.S. Congress held hearings on human rights in Russia. The first remarks by Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), conducting the hearings, and they were pretty tough. This was not surprising, since long ago she signed a bill named for Sergey L. Magnitsky, a Russian attorney killed in police custody. This bill now has twenty-five senators supporting it in the upper house of the U.S. Congress, and may well be adopted. Further testimony was given Phillip H. Gordon, Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of European and Eurasian affairs, and Thomas O. Melia, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the Bureau for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.

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16
October 2011

Support Magnitsky Act

Democratic Russia Committee

Why this is Important

This act directly imposes sanctions on persons responsible for the detention, abuse, and death in prison of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who discovered a falsified $ 230 millions tax refund paid against the law to criminals.

The U.S. State Department imposed sanctions without waiting for the debate in Congress to the bill to ban people involved into “Sergey’s Magnitsky list” to enter the U.S. and the arrest of their accounts in U.S. banks. This action, however, might stop Congress to pass this bill or will not allow providing more stringent sanctions against a larger number of Russian officials. The administration sees no need to take this additional law.

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