Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russia pressures broadcaste­r

U.S.-funded outlet faces legal action over 520 unpaid fines

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MOSCOW — Russian court bailiffs showed up Friday at Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty’s Moscow bureau to notify it about the launch of enforcemen­t proceeding­s over unpaid fines as part of mounting pressure on the U.S.-funded broadcaste­r.

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s President Jamie Fly said the broadcaste­r’s Moscow bank accounts were also frozen Friday in what he denounced as a serious escalation in the Russian government’s campaign to drive it out of the country.

“RFE/RL will continue to fight these desperate attempts by the Kremlin to censor uncomforta­ble truths,” Fly said in a statement. “We will not be silenced by these heavy-handed tactics and we will not abandon our Russian audience.”

Last year, Russia’s media watchdog Roskomnadz­or ordered the media designated as foreign agents, including Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, to add a lengthy statement to news reports, social media posts and audiovisua­l materials specifying that the content was created by an outlet “performing the functions of a foreign agent.”

The move, which applies to nongovernm­ental political organizati­ons and media receiving foreign funding, has been widely criticized as aiming to discredit critical reporting and dissent. The term “foreign agent” carries strong pejorative connotatio­ns in Russia.

Roskomnadz­or has filed 520 violation cases against Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which could entail fines totaling $2.4 million.

In a call with reporters, Fly said that the broadcaste­r has refused to pay the fines because it considers them unlawful.

“We have been very clear throughout this that we will not pay these fines,” he said. “We believe that the labeling is illegitima­te; it violates Russia’s own constituti­on. We aren’t going to back down in the face of this pressure.”

The broadcaste­r has asked the European Court of Human Rights to order Russia to refrain from enforcing the fines until the court can make a full ruling on Roskomnadz­or’s moves, which Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty contends violates the European Convention on Human Rights.

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty isn’t alone in facing the “foreign agent” labeling, Over the past weeks, the Russian Justice Ministry has designated online media outlet Meduza, Moscow-based First Anticorrup­tion Media and Netherland­s-based VTimes. io as “foreign agents.”

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has condemned Russia’s mounting pressure on the media as a sign of the Kremlin’s weakness.

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