Russian Parliament OKs controversial internet bill

Russian Parliament OKs controversial internet bill

MOSCOW

A woman holds a caricature depicting Russian President Vladimir Putin during an opposition rally ‘For Russia without Putin!’ in St. Petersburg, Russia. AP Photo

Russia is debating the fate of internet freedom as the Parliament was set to vote into law a contentious bill that activists fear will introduce Internet censorship by blacklisting sites deemed as undesirable.

The amendments to an existing information law are being promoted as a crackdown on child pornography, creating a federal register that would rule out websites carrying banned information and oblige site owners and providers to close down the sites.

The Russian-language version of Wikipedia went on strike on July 10 in protest at the bill. “Imagine a world without free knowledge,” it said, blocking access to the site. The site was back up yesterday.

The bill has been scheduled for approval in second and third readings yesterday after the initial reading last week, with next to no debate or public discussion. Russia’s biggest search engine Yandex said the bill’s proposed methods to fight pornography “create room for possible misuse and raise questions from Internet users and company representatives.”

“Such decisions cannot be taken hastily, the way it is happening now,” said the statement signed by the company’s chief editor Yelena Kolmanovskaya. The engine’s slogan “Everything will be found” had the word ‘everything’ crossed out on the main page yesterday.

Opposition decries

An expert on Russia’s security services, Andrei Soldatov, said the bill would introduce a technical possibility of blocking foreign sites for the first time by forcing Internet providers to install special equipment. “Clearly, it will be possible to use it not just against websites propagating pornography; the government will be able to use these instruments any way it wants,” he wrote on his website Agentura.ru.

“The amendments can lead to introduction of censorship to Russian Internet,” said Livejournal, a popular blogging platform frequently used by opposition leaders for communicating with their audience. Opposition deputies decried what they said was a trend of introducing restrictive bills at short notice and ramming them through without any public discussion.

“We are turning the parliament into an secretarial office that carries out somebody else’s wishes,” opposition deputy Gennady Gudkov of the Just Russia party said at the hearings.