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Kyrgyzstan adopts law targeting foreign-funded NGOs

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03-04-2024 (updated: 03-04-2024 )

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Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) and Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov sit for a meeting at the Kazan Expo international exhibition centre in Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, Russia, 21 February 2024. [Kremlin pool/EPA/EFE]

Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov on Tuesday (2 April) signed into law a bill tightening state control over foreign-funded non-governmental organisations (NGOs), which human rights bodies and groups have criticised as restrictive.

The law, which uses provisions and language similar to that of the 2012 Russian law on “foreign agents”, introduces additional reporting obligations on NGOs with foreign funding that are engaged in “political” activities.

It also gives the Central Asian nation’s authorities greater oversight powers and provides for criminal sanctions in the event of non-compliance.

The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe warned in February that passing the bill “would have an overwhelmingly negative impact on civil society, human rights defenders, and the media in Kyrgyzstan”.

Japarov’s office said in a statement that the law was designed to make the work of NGOs more transparent.

Its adoption follows what Western governments have described as a crackdown on independent media in the country, which is closely allied with Moscow and hosts a Russian military airbase.

The US State Department said it was “deeply concerned” by the adoption of law, adding that it puts the work of NGOs at risk.

“This is the latest in a series of Kyrgyz government actions that have undermined democratic governance and civil society,” department spokesperson Matt Miller said in a statement.

“While the law’s current form does not directly target media outlets, it could cripple the work of press freedom groups and nonprofits running several of Kyrgyzstan’s celebrated independent media organizations and must be repealed.”https://t.co/pxH3cQUeT5

— CPJ Europe and Central Asia (@CPJ_Eurasia) April 2, 2024

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