LONDON: Amnesty International said on Monday that it would keep up investigations on Russia despite Moscow declaring the rights group an “undesirable organisation”, effectively banning its operations and exposing supporters to prosecution.

“This decision is part of the Russian government’s broader effort to silence dissent and isolate civil society,” Amnesty secretary general Agnes Callamard said in a statement. Amnesty said the move would not deter its efforts to document rights abuses, including alleged war crimes by Russian forces in Ukraine.

Russia’s prosecutor general accused the London-headquartered body of being a “centre for the preparation of global Russophobic projects, paid for by accomplices of the Kyiv regime.” Moscow has outlawed dozens of international civil society groups amid a years-long crackdown on dissent and criticism that has escalated since it launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. It said the group had “been doing everything possible to intensify the military confrontation in the region, justifying the crimes of the Ukrainian neo-Nazis, calling for increased funding for them and supporting the political and economic isolation of our country.” Kyiv, the West and independent experts have repeatedly rejected Moscow’s claims that it is fighting to “de-Nazify” Ukraine as baseless Kremlin propaganda.

On its website, Amnesty calls Russia’s military offensive on Ukraine a “war of aggression”. “The rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association remained severely restricted,” it adds, detailing “arbitrary persecution” of religious groups, children and LGBTQ groups, among others. “Dissenters faced arbitrary prosecutions, unfair trials, heavy fines and lengthy prison terms under a plethora of laws that failed to meet international human rights standards,” Amnesty stated. Groups labelled “undesirable” are banned from operating in Russia.

Published in Dawn, May 20th, 2025

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