February 3, 2005
Arizona Daily Star
MOSCOW - Russia has restricted rights to such an extent that, for the first time since the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union, it has joined the countries that are not free, Freedom House said Monday, marking Moscow's march away from the Western democracies it has embraced as diplomatic partners.
"This setback for freedom represented the year's most important political trend," the U.S.-based nongovernmental organization wrote in its annual study, Freedom in the World 2005.
Freedom House noted increased Kremlin control over national television and other media, limitations on local government, and parliamentary and presidential elections it said were neither free nor fair.
"Russia's step backward into the 'not free' category is the culmination of a growing trend under President Vladimir Putin to concentrate political authority, harass and intimidate the media and politicize the country's law-enforcement system," Executive Director Jennifer Windsor said in a statement.
"These moves mark a dangerous and disturbing drift toward authoritarianism in Russia, made more worrisome by President Putin's recent heavy-handed meddling in political developments in neighboring countries, such as Ukraine."
The report accused Putin of exploiting the terrorist seizure of a school in southern Russia to ram through what Freedom House called the dismantling of local authority.
In the wake of the September attack, which killed more than 330 people, Putin introduced a plan to end the election of governors by popular vote and the election of legislators in individual races. Currently, the 450 seats in the lower house of parliament are equally split between those filled through party lists and those contested in district races.
Freedom House said that on balance, the world saw increased freedom in 2004: 26 countries showed gains while 11 showed decline. Of the world's 192 countries, it judged 46 percent free, 26 percent not free, and the rest partly free. Eight rated as the most repressive: Burma, Cuba, Libya, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria and Turkmenistan.
The Russian Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment on the report.
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