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Russia set to ban US news organisations from covering parliament in blow for press freedoms

Duma to debate proposed parliamentary prohibition on American journalists in response to US forcing RT to register as a foreign agent. There is no serious doubt the measure will be passed

Oliver Carroll
Moscow
Friday 01 December 2017 09:45 EST
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The lower chamber of Russia’s parliament, where US journalists will not be allowed, if the ban passes
The lower chamber of Russia’s parliament, where US journalists will not be allowed, if the ban passes (AFP/Getty)

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Speaking on Wednesday evening, Russian presidential spokesperson Dmitry Peskov left reporters in little doubt. The “unfriendly” decision by the US Senate to strip the RT news network of its congressional credentials would be met with a strong “mirror” response.

It soon became clear that Russia’s interpretation of America in the looking glass would be anything but a simple reflection.

On Thursday morning, Olga Savastyanova, chair of the State Duma Organisation and Regulation Committee, announced she was “examining” a proposal to ban all American journalists from Russia’s lower parliament. In addition, she would encourage regional assemblies to adopt similar practices.

Given previous history and the direction of official comments, the passage of the measure is not in serious doubt. Ms Savastyanova said her committee would look at the proposal on Monday, and that it would be “debated” in parliament on Wednesday. The Tass state news agency quoted a source suggesting that the ban would be in place as early as next week.

Ms Savastyanova made it clear that the measure is a direct response to the 29 November decision to deny congressional credentials to Kremlin-funded RT. That censure followed another US decision to force RT to register as a foreign agent under federal lobbying laws.

Russia retaliated against that restriction by introducing a broadly worded amendment to its own media law on 15 November.

That amendment will force a wide range of foreign-funded media to register as “foreign agents”. At the very least, it is likely to place significant reporting burdens on Voice of America, Radio Liberty/Radio Free Europe, Current Time and even CNN.

At the time, Human Rights Watch described the Russian legislation as “shockingly broad, disproportionate, and a serious infringement on freedom of media”.

Today’s move is mostly symbolic and unlikely to seriously impact reporting from Russia. Former Duma speaker Boris Gryzlov famously described the lower parliament as “no place for discussion” and it has long conceded law-making rights to the presidential administration.

Some reporters might even be relieved at the prospect of avoiding such coverage.

But the media tit-for-tat has serious consequences. Over two decades, the Kremlin has required little excuse to clamp down on the media. That pockets of independent journalism still exist there is the result of the tenacity of individual journalists and editors. The American moves to restrict RT, a relatively uninfluential platform, are likely to make their tasks harder.

Today, Russia’s Independent Union of Journalists issued a strong statement. It warned against unintended consequences of “heavy-handed actions” by the United States.

“We ask that both the US and Russian authorities cease this senseless and self-destructive race,” it said. “There will be no winners in this new Cold War.”

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