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#5 - JRL 7029
gazeta.ru
January 22, 2003
Kasyanov bans Hezbollah in Russia
By Maria Tsvetkova
Russia will soon have its own blacklist of organizations involved in
terrorist activities. Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov has signed the government’s
resolution setting out the guidelines of making such a list and the work is due
to start immediately.
Strictly speaking, the Financial Monitoring Committee, tasked with making the
list over the next few months, will be engaged in purely technical work. The
committee’s press secretary Natalya Konovalova told Gazeta.Ru on Tuesday that
the committee would be gathering information from the Justice Ministry, the
Prosecutor General’s Office, the Interior Ministry as well as international
organizations and then would compile them all in a single index. The principles
of the index’s structure are defined in a special resolution, approved by the
government and signed by Prime Minister Kasyanov on Tuesday.
The first category of persons and organizations to be included in the list
are those recognized by the courts as guilty of terrorist activities. The second
category includes those whose activities are suspended by the Prosecutor General’s
Office because they are suspected of ties with extremists and those persons
against whom criminal cases have been instigated for crimes connected with
terrorism. ''It is not yet known whether the list will be long or short, but it
is absolutely certain that it will hold several dozen entries,'' the press
secretary said.
However, the list of organizations and private individuals involved in
extremist activities will not be made public, Viktor Zubkov, head of the FMC and
deputy finance minister, told Interfax. ''The list will be closed. We will
obtain materials from the courts, other establishments, law enforcement agencies
and from international organizations,'' Zubkov said. ''This list will be stored
in the FMC database. As soon as signals of terrorism or extremism appear, we
will look over this list and see whether these people or organizations are on
it,'' he said. In addition, the FMC will send copies of this list to
organizations that carry out monetary or property transactions.
All the anti-terrorist measures that could be applied to the list members are
actually applicable at the moment. In accordance with Russian law, any bank or
other financial institution can block a suspicious financial operation for a
two-day period and the Financial Monitoring Committee can block it for a further
five days. As the blacklist appears, these terms are not set to change. ''In
total, this makes seven working days. In this period of time we must transfer
the information to the law enforcement bodies,'' Konovalova said. ''This time is
enough to undertake some actions.''
The list will only include those international terrorist organizations listed
in the international documents of a similar kind, recognized by the Russian
authorities. One such document is the blacklist approved by the European Union’s
Security Council. It includes extremist organizations of the Irish and Basque
separatists as well as pro-Palestinian Middle East groups like Hezbollah and the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade. The Russian blacklist must also reflect those of other
countries if there are bilateral agreements on the subject.
Whether or not the Russian list will be accepted at the International level
depends, of course, on its content. If, for example, the Russian Prosecutor
General insists on including in the list Chechen emissary Akhmed Zakayev, who
faces charges of terrorism in Russia, it is not likely that Great Britain would
block the accounts of Vanessa Redgrave, who is currently providing her personal
friend with accommodation, money for bail and moral support.
On the other hand, Zakayev will surely be among the first people included in
the blacklist of Russia’s prosecutors. This suggests that the Russian list is
likely to remain a document for internal use only, which provides nothing but
additional convenience. All in all, it seems every state taking part in the
fight against international terrorism must have a blacklist of some sort; it
would be considered bad form not to.
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