Yusuf Fernandez
On December 6, the US House and Senate passed as a law
the so-called “Magnitsky Act,” which was shortly after signed by President
Barack Obama. The approval of the act was hailed by Congress and the US media as
“an important step in the cause of human rights and democracy”.
The law is directed specifically at Russian officials suspected of being
responsible for the prison death of the financier Sergei Magnitsky in 2009, but
it also contains US visa and financial sanctions against all Russian officials
allegedly guilty of “gross violations of human rights”.
According to some media, the Act´s sponsors were motivated by their hostility
to Russia rather than by any real concern for democracy and human rights. In
fact, the Act´s main lobbyist, William Browder, head of the London-based
Hermitage hedge fund, is currently under investigation in Russia on suspicion of
tax evasion.
The approval of “Magnitsky Act” is also a reflection of the prevailing
anti-Russian sentiment in the US Congress, said Alexander Strakanov, Director of
the Institute of Russian language, History and Culture at Lyndon College in the
state of Vermont, to the Voice of Russia. In recent years, US Congress has been
undermining US-Russian cooperation in several areas from Afghanistan to
international terrorism.
Some experts have pointed out that the Act violates US and international law.
Firstly, the list of the individuals who will be sanctioned can be based on
information and data provided by US NGOs and interest groups. That means that
Russian authorities can now rightly suppose that US NGOs working in Russia are
involved in espionage activities. On the other hand, some US interest groups can
try to promote their economic or political goals by accusing Russian officials
of all kind of crimes and offences. Secondly, the act violates the principles of
due process and presumption of innocence. And thirdly, it is an open
interference in Russia´s internal affairs.
“I qualify the Magnistky Act as a discriminatory law against Russia”, Russian
political observer Mikhail Remizov told the Voice of Russia. “Moreover, the act
presupposes arrests of Russian citizens in the US without any decision of any
court, which is an unprecedented step. It is only a court that has the right to
take such decisions, not any other political body. I believe that this decision
was politically motivated. The fact that this decision was initiated by a
congressman and approved by the US State Secretary is evidence that it was
politically motivated.”
President Putin called the approval of the Magnistky Act an “unfriendly and
politicized act” and added that even if there had been no Magnitsky´s case, the
US authorities would have probably invented another pretext to show that the
United States is “the boss of the entire world”, although no one has ever given
this country the authority to be such. “If the US adopts any other
discriminatory laws against Russia like the Magnitsky Act, Russia will also
respond with more sanctions against the US,” President Putin warned.
Putin made it clear that US has no legitimacy to criticize other countries on
the human rights issue and recalled the “medieval” conditions at Guantanamo Bay.
“At Guantanamo, they keep people in prison for years without any charges,” Putin
said at a news conference in Moscow. “People there go around in shackles, like
in medieval times”.
Russian
response
Some days after the Magnitsky Act was passed, the Russian
parliament´s lower house, Duma, adopted “the Dima Yakovlev law” that suspends
the activities of US NGOs operating in Russia. The law also bans those US
officials, who have illegally put Russian nationals in prison or sentenced
Russian citizens to “unreasonably severe punishments”, from receiving entry
visas to Russia. A similar ban has been put in place against agents of US secret
services who have kidnapped Russian citizens.
Besides, the law sets a ban for US citizens to adopt Russian children. The
law was dubbed “Dima Yakovlev” in memory of a Russian boy who died because his
American adoptive father forgot him in a car. It is only another case in which
Russian children have been neglected, humiliated or even killed by US adoptive
parents. In the last 20 years, 19 Russian children have been killed by their US
adoptive parents or died due to their US adoptive parents´ faults.
At the same time, Russia has required all shipments of US meat to be tested
and proved free of a controversial animal feed additive: the ractopamine. The
measure effectively amounts to a ban because the US considers ractopamine safe
and does not test for it. However, the US claims that the move violates WTO
regulations. “These Russian demands constitute a political retaliation to the
U.S. Senate passing the Magnitsky Act,” ITAR-TASS quoted unnamed representatives
of the US Meat Export Federation as saying.
Strategic
clash
In reality, the “Magnitsky Act” is another sign of the deterioration of the
relations between the United States and Russia. The Russian foreign ministry
stated that the act was “nothing but a vindictive desire to counter Russia in
world affairs”.
Russia has rejected NATO expansionist policies and has blocked the
incorporation of Ukraine and Georgia into the Western alliance. At the same
time, Moscow had condemned the deployment of parts of a US missile defence
system (ABM) in Eastern Europe because it threatens Russian nuclear missiles,
which are the pillar of the Russian power and deterrence.
In the Middle
East, Moscow and Washington have also different approaches. Moscow regards the
US-led efforts to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad as a major threat
to Russian interests in the Middle East. Russia also rejects US´s policy –based
on sanctions and threats- towards the Iranian nuclear program. These and other
issues have brought both countries closer to a new cold war. Russia is backed by
China in its opposition to Western aggressive policies towards Syria and
Iran.
A joint statement at the summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
(SCO), which took place in Beijing in June 2012, stated that Russia and China
would keep on safeguarding the “fruits of the Second World War and the post-war
political order, according to the United Nations´ Charter and the basic
principles of international law.”
This statement was a direct warning to the United States, which both Russia
and China have criticised for violating international law during the military
interventions in Iraq and Libya. A Russian media outlet said: “Members of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization have established effective cooperation to
protect their interests against some global powers that are used to settling
problems by force.” This was clearly an announcement that the SCO will not allow
the US to penetrate into the Eurasian heartland or change unfriendly regimes,
which has strong links with Moscow and Beijing.
Therefore, China and Russia are trying to make the SCO a coordinating body
for the states of Central and South Asia in the sphere of economic and security
cooperation. The block has become a more valuable and effective tool for them in
order to counter the US's containment strategy toward them.
At the same time, Moscow is trying to create another block, the Eurasian
Union, similar to the European Union. In November, Russia signed an agreement
with Belarus and Kazakhstan as a first step towards this goal. Other eight
countries are expected to join the new organization.
For its part, the US is worried about the Russia and China´s attemps to
achieve an Eurasian economic and political integration under their influence. US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned in December that Washington would do
its best to prevent or slow down what she said was a Russian attempt to
“re-Sovietize” the former Soviet space. “It is going to be called a customs
union, it will be called Eurasia Union and all of that. But let´s make no
mistake about it. We know what the goal is and we are trying to figure out
effective ways to slow down or prevent it,” she said. For his part, Putin said
that Clinton´s remarks were “rubbish”.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
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