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No Foreign Money for Russian NGOs
December 7, 2005
By Yuri Mamchur <yuri@discovery.org>
http://www.russiablog.org/2005/12/no_foreign_money_for_russian_n.htmlNext week
new
legislation will likely be approved to prohibit any Russian NGO’s
(non-government organizations) from receiving money from abroad. The law was
approved by Parliament’s majority in the first reading last month.
Many
foreign
media outlets see this bill as another example of the Putin “regime”'s
oppression. Personally, I don’t support the bill, but I would like to
offer a different opinion from an educated Russian on the non-profits funded
from abroad, and Putin’s “regime” in general.
There are 450,000 NGOs in Russia, and these organizations represent all the
aspects of Russian life – religious organizations, charities, think tanks, etc.
The idea of prohibiting non-profits receiving funding from abroad seems almost
insane to Westerners, but not many foreigners know the following facts about
Russian churches and charities...
The Russian Orthodox Church, which is supposed to be separate from the
government (but never has been) has traded oil, liquor and tobacco. Almost every
single so-called charity ends up running big-time electoral campaigns; this
would not be legal in the U.S. – I don’t think if George W. Bush's reelection
had been sponsored by Saudi Arabian foundations, or Kerry’s campaign had been
sponsored by France, we would have been ok with it in America.
Many non-profits in Russia, without even knowing it, have hired intelligence
officials of foreign countries (the author personally knows few examples). After
some increased activity of this kind in recent months, Putin came up with the
bill. Though this is not nearly enough.
Another question regarding non-profits: why does the Open Russia Fund,
sponsored by jailed oligarch Khodorkovsky,
get their money comes from overseas bank accounts? If he is a Russian
businessman, shouldn’t the money be coming from some Siberian bank? Can you
imagine if the Heritage Foundation
were getting checks or wire transfers from the Maldives or Cyprus? I don’t think
the fundraising/development staff would even consider that. I understand that in
the Russian banking system transparency is almost non-existent, since there are
thousands of banks, each serving the separate semi-legal purposes of its
personal owner. But wasn’t it the job of the
richest
Russians to create in the 1990s a trust-worthy banking system? They have
failed even after 15 years to do it.
And if Khodarkovsky had billions of dollars (anywhere between 8 and 20,
depending on where you read about it), why was his charity directed only at
bashing Putin, who was in the way of doing his business, and not at multiple
social projects (there were just a few of them that foundation was managing). If
someone young in his late 30s made a fortune from oil by getting lucky and smart
during the ‘privatization’ period, wouldn’t it be more “ethical” to consider
larger giving to charity than a lousy 50 million dollars a year? The Gates
Foundation in contrast gives out a billion dollars to charitable causes all over
the world each year.
The existing social projects in this extremely poor and discouraged country
are there only because of their PR value (see
Abramovich's
buying the Governor's seat in the poor Siberian state of Chuhotka). It’s
easier to fight government prosecution and get support from Western media, when
you have couple foster homes around.
After all,
Russian
oligarchs aren’t Sam Walton or Bill Gates, they didn’t invent anything, they
didn’t even build anything; they appropriated (legally stole) Soviet resources
during the mess of the 1990s, and have been raking in the profits from Stalin’s
factories since then, without returning capital investments back into their own
country. The perfect example is Mr. Abramovich, who simply bought a few castles
in Britain, three Boeing planes, a few yachts, and invested over a billion
dollars into a British soccer club. Would that be well received in America, if
ChevronTexaco takes its money to Germany and invests every single penny there,
without investing anything into America, or even giving it a chance to see the
glorious profits, profits that are possible only because of American natural
resources and workers?
The subject of Russian non-profits is very opaque to foreign observers. My
father is a president of the oldest charitable foundation in the country, and in
his opinion there are only about 1,000 non-profits which are doing what they are
supposed to be doing. And usually for their causes Russian businessmen can
always find money to support certain projects. The question is: what are the
other 449,000 NGO’s doing? Money laundering?
Russia is a country, where it’s very easy to forge any document or fact.
Within 12 hours, the author of this article could show you multi-million
accounts and big projects which look very real. And even if an American donor
showed up to check on what’s going on with the money he gave to the author in
real life in Russia, I would’ve filled the biggest city hall with few thousand
students and banners of my “NGO”. After all, it takes only a gift card to a nice
bar or coffee shop to get a student to “participate” in an event, and few more
hundred bucks and some kind of connections to forge bank statements and federal
government documents.
So where does your money go, foreign donors? Are you sure you know how your
money is being invested? There’s a common Russian joke when two NGO executives
meet, and one of them is driving a brand new Mercedes. “How did you get a new
$100,000 car?” – asks the first guy. “I just received donation for my ‘homeless
children shelter’ from the silly Americans!”
The issues of the Russian non-profit sector are very complex and politicized,
just like everything else in Russia, and Putin is doing what he has to – he
doesn’t have time to re-write the country’s legislation while there’s the
Chechen war going on, and 80 % of the country’s population is barely making a
living. This bill seems to be a temporary solution, but it's not seen by most
Russians as a pressing issue anyway. The 1,000 genuine charitable foundations
and think tanks will suffer, but the other 449,000 crooks will be out of
business. If the bill is 99.8% successful, doesn’t that mean that it isn’t so
bad?
In the meantime, I think those who are concerned with the Russian civil
society and democracy would do much better sponsoring Russian democracy projects
that already exist abroad, even here in America. The legal system is stable, and
I am personally 100% accountable for how I spend the money given to Discovery
Institute to promote the democracy in Russia. I’m not going to buy a Mercedes,
because I don’t even see the money.
Many foundations argue that it’s way more important to support civil society
on the ground, in Russia. I disagree. Yesterday I talked to 50 years old
Ukrainian Christian refugees, who live in Seattle, and they stated that the only
hope for Russia these days is another "good" Stalin! I don’t think any money
invested in education of older people could dramatically change their point of
view, or direction of development the country takes. It is very important to
target the youth, and that’s where foreign investors are failing.
You can send billions of dollars to Russia, and even if spent properly, it
will not have that much impact. I’ve come on exchange programs to America for
many years, before I decided to live in the U.S. and work with Russia. But
before that I had participated in every possible “civil society” project back in
Moscow. I can testify that it’s impossible to explain why America works the way
it does; and someone born in Russia will never understand it, no matter how much
he reads or listens. However, it took only 4 months of my first trip to fall in
love with America and embrace true democratic values and free market ideals.
Maybe world leaders should be less concerned with Putin’s bill, and do more
to open up their borders for the brightest Russian youth. Young Russians won't
join jihad groups to blow up your planes and buildings, neither will they stay
here illegally to wash dishes. But they will take ideas about democracy back
home, and spread it among their peers. And with much smaller investments,
foreign donors could see incredible results, which they would have never
achieved investing and educating “on the ground”; the only losers in this game
are the foreign intelligence services.
I don’t think Putin’s bill eliminates the ability to promote democracy and
free market in Russia, it only reminds foreigners of other, better ways to do it.
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