http://www.themoscowtimes.com/article/1328/42/376082.htm

How Moscow Compiles Its 'Extremist' List Guarantees Absurdities, Russian Lawyer 
Says
09 April 2009    

By Paul Goble / Special to The Moscow Times The Moscow Times is proud to begin 
syndication of the excellent Window on Eurasia blog, written by scholar and 
Eurasia specialist Paul Goble. Window on Eurasia covers current events in 
Russia and the nations of the former Soviet Union, with a focus on issues of 
ethnicity and religion. The issues covered are often not those written about on 
the front pages of newspapers; instead, the articles in the Windows series 
focus on those issues that either have not been much discussed or provide an 
approach to stories that have been. Frequent topics include civil rights, 
radicalism, Russian Islam, the Russian Orthodox Church, and events in the North 
Caucasus, among others. New entries will be added daily, so check back often. - 
TMT 

Moscow is unlikely to follow the demand of one Russian churchman and declare 
Amway an "extremist" organization, but the way the Russian government compiles 
its ever-lengthening list of "extremist materials" guarantees any number of 
constitutional and legal absurdities, according to a Russian lawyer. 

In an analysis posted online this week, Pavel Protasov describes the way in 
which the list of extremist materials is currently being compiled and updated - 
the latest update is available here - in order to show why this should be but 
isn't an April Fool's joke. 

"On April 1, when all progressive humanity was marking a holiday," the Moscow 
lawyer writes, "the latest updating of the list of extremist materials" - 
including films, books, articles, and other items that courts in various parts 
of the country had declared extremist and subject to ban - "appeared on the 
official website of the [Russian Federation's] justice ministry." 

Among the new items is the website www.fank.ru, which a Samara district court 
has declared extremist. But the site is still up, the lawyer notes, and if you 
visit it, you will not be able to find "any skinheads or, let us say, Muslim 
terrorists." Instead, you will see an entertainment site with photographs, 
music and videos for mobile phones. 

The "first thought that comes to mind," Protasov continues, "is that this was 
an April Fool's joke." But a closer examination shows that the judges in this 
case took their duties perfectly seriously, although they appear not to be able 
to distinguish between something posted on a site and the editorial policy of 
the site itself. 

Thus, when the judges found what they believed to be an "extremist" item of 
some kind on that site, the lawyer continues, they chose to ban the site rather 
than ban the material in question, an approach with chilling implications not 
only for the Internet but for media outlets of all kinds. 

A consideration of several of the other new items on the banned list shows some 
more disturbing signs. Not only do the individual courts operate without taking 
into account the decisions of others, but there appears to be no way in which a 
finding by one court that something is not extreme can be used to repeal a 
decision by another that it is. 

Thus, the latest additions to the extremist list include three articles that 
another court had found, on the basis of expert testimony, not to be extreme. 
On the one hand, that creates a Kafkaesque nightmare for anyone whose work 
falls on the list, and on the other, it can allow the powers that be to turn to 
a particular court to get the rulings they want. 

That is, Protasov says, officials can get whatever ruling they want not only by 
selecting the court in which a publication is reviewed but also by ensuring 
that the "correct" person serves as an "expert" - liberal texts can be handed 
to those with rightwing conclusions and something written by a fascist can 
handed to a liberal for review. 

Russia's courts need not be in this position, Protasov says. Every district 
court has its own website where it could publish such decisions and thus inform 
others. That would simultaneously create precedents that could be used and open 
the way of voiding decisions if expert testimony in another venue leads to a 
different conclusion. 

But under existing judicial rules, no court is required to post its decisions 
or even to pay attention to the decisions of others, and that "has created the 
impression that the authors of those changes in the law by which the extremist 
list was introduced see such additions to it as an ideal process." 

Protasov reviews what he calls the "comic" history of the works of Said Nursi, 
someone who many in his homeland of Turkey have severely criticized but a man 
whose works "no one [there] has thought of banning." But Russian courts have 
done just that, even though most of the rulings suggest that the judges 
involved know little or nothing about Islam. 

And that calls attention to another of "the inherent shortcomings" of such 
lists: judges are not told "how they ought to describe materials so that they 
can be identified" by law enforcement personnel, and consequently they often 
simply guess at the content of a particular book or article on the basis of a 
perusal of "its title page." 

This system should have been laughed out of existence long before now, Protasov 
says. Indeed, it should never have been allowed to be put in place. But the 
list continues to grow. As a result, more comic and at the same time more 
tragic rulings are likely in the future, with the very real possibility, he 
concludes, that a Russian court will ban one or more books of the Bible. 

About this blog 

Window on Eurasia covers current events in Russia and the nations of the former 
Soviet Union, with a focus on issues of ethnicity and religion. The issues 
covered are often not those written about on the front pages of newspapers. 
Instead, the articles in the Windows series focus on those issues that either 
have not been much discussed or provide an approach to stories that have been. 
Frequent topics include civil rights, radicalism, Russian Islam, the Russian 
Orthodox Church, and events in the North Caucasus, among others. 

Author Paul Goble is a longtime specialist on ethnic and religious questions in 
Eurasia. Most recently, he was director of research and publications at the 
Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy. He has served in various capacities in the U.S. 
State Department, the Central Intelligence Agency and the International 
Broadcasting Bureau as well as at the Voice of America and Radio Free 
Europe/Radio Liberty and at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He 
writes frequently on ethnic and religious issues and has edited five volumes on 
ethnicity and religion in the former Soviet space. 

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