#6 - JRL 2007-55 - JRL Home
Excerpt
US Department of State
On-The-Record Briefing on the State Department's 2006
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
Paula Dobriansky, Under Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs;
Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Barry F.
Lowenkron
Washington, DC
March 6, 2007
QUESTION: (Inaudible) I'm with RTVi. Could you elaborate on the situation of
the trends in Russia regarding human rights and democracy, and also in Belarus?
How concerned are you about those two countries?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY LOWENKRON: Well, that's a pretty good follow-up to that
question. I would say if I had to pick another country in which it's regressing,
I would also pick Russia. I think if you look at a number of indicators, if you
look at the difficulty in parties who are able to reregister -- 35 tried, 19
made it, the party of independent Duma member Ryzhkov was denied, former Prime
Minister Kasyanov was also denied -- I think it's -- I think the notion that
there was a level playing field in terms of electoral politics in Russia is
increasingly suspect.
I think if you take a look at the media, I think if you take a look at the
statements coming out of Russian officials that they have something called
sovereign democracy or managed democracy -- I'm probably dating myself, but from
my years in the State Department back in the 1980s I was never big on adjectives
before democracy, like "people's democracy." And sovereign democracy and managed
democracy is problematic.
QUESTION: Belarus?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY LOWENKRON: Belarus -- there is nothing good to say about
Belarus except -- about the regime in Belarus except the fact that civil society
is still trying. And we had a group from Belarus that came to Washington just
last week. I had the privilege of meeting with them. I was interested in their
plans. They're not going to give up. They're going to continue to press. The
citizens of Belarus will find themselves that there is an alternative, there is
an alternative to Yushchenko, there is an alternative to a regime that
suppresses their human rights, and that alternative lies to its other neighbors.
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