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Yarovaya law

The Yarovaya law (in Russian: Закон Яровой, transliteration: Zakon Jarovoy), also Yarovaya package/bag, is a set of two Russian federal bills, 374-FZ and 375-FZ, passed in 2016.[1] The bills amend previous counter-terrorism laws and separate laws which regulate additional counter-terror and public safety measures. The public names the law after the last name of one of its creators—Irina Yarovaya.

Yarovaya law
Federal Assembly
  • On Amendments to the Federal Law "On Countering Terrorism" and Certain Legislative Acts of the Russian Federation regarding the establishment of additional measures to counter terrorism and ensure public security
Citation374-FZ
375-FZ
Territorial extentRussia
Signed byPresident Vladimir Putin
Signed7 July 2016
Commenced20 July 2016
1 July 2018
Legislative history
Introduced byIrina Yarovaya (YR)
Aleksey Pushkov (YR)
Nadezhda Gerasimova (YR)
First reading24 June 2016 (State Duma)
Second reading29 June 2016 (Federation Council)
Related legislation
Criminal Code of Russia
Law Against Rehabilitation of Nazism
Keywords
Religious freedom in Russia
Status: Current legislation

The amendments included an expansion of authority for law enforcement agencies, new requirements for data collection and mandatory decoding in the telecommunications industry, as well as the increased regulation of evangelism, including a ban on the performance of "missionary activities" in non-religious settings.

Legislative history edit

In April 2016 Irina Yarovaya, together with Aleksei Pushkov, and Nadezhda Gerasimova and senator Victor Ozerov introduced a project of legislation that would toughen penalties for extremism and terrorism.[2] On 13 May 2016, the law passed after the first reading.[3] Prior to that, it had received support from the prime minister's cabinet. On 7 July it was signed by the President of Russia, Vladimir Putin.

Most of the act's amendments came into effect on 20 July 2016.[4] Amendments that require telecom operators to store recordings of phone conversations, text messages and users' internet traffic up to 6 months were announced to come into force on July 1, 2018. However, senator Anton Belyakov has submitted a proposal to move the regulations' effective date to 2023, because of the extreme amount of data storage technology needed to meet the requirements.[5]

Content edit

Penal provisions edit

The amendments of the Yarovaya law include lengthening of prison terms for a number of criminal activities, introduction of new reasons to deny entry or departure to and from Russia, and the introduction of criminal liability for failure to report to law enforcement authorities that someone else "has been planning, is perpetrating, or has perpetrated" terrorist activity.[6][7]

Surveillance provisions edit

The Yarovaya amendments require telecom providers to store the content of voice calls, data, images and text messages for 6 months, and their metadata (e.g. time, location and message sender and recipients) for 3 years.[8][9] Online services such as messaging services, email and social networks that use encrypted data are required to permit the Federal Security Service (FSB) to access and read their encrypted communications.[8][9]

Internet and telecom companies are required to disclose these communications and metadata, as well as "all other information necessary" to authorities on request and without a court order.[10]

Anti-evangelism provisions edit

The amendments also include new restrictions on evangelism and missionary work.[11] The amendments add a new provision to Russia's Religion Legislation, stating that "missionary activity" may only be performed "without hindrance" at churches and other religious sites designated by the chapter. It is explicitly banned from residential buildings. "Missionary activity" is defined as

The activity of a religious association, aimed at disseminating information about its beliefs among people who are not participants (members, followers) in that religious association, with the purpose of involving these people as participants (members, followers). It is carried out directly by religious associations or by citizens and/or legal entities authorised by them, publicly, with the help of the media, the internet or other lawful means".[12]

Missionary activities may not be used to pursue violations of public safety, "the motivation of citizens to refuse to fulfil their civic duties as established by law and to commit other illegal acts", suicide, or the refusal of medical treatment on religious grounds as aims.[12]

Missionary activities may only be performed by authorized members of registered religious groups and organizations. A group becomes ineligible to perform missionary activities if they have been banned under a court order for practicing extremism or terrorism, or have been liquidated. Foreign missionaries may only perform missionary activities after registering for a permit from a recognized religious organization.[12][13][14][15] Citizens are also required to report unauthorized religious activity to the government or face fines.[13]

Implementation edit

Surveillance provisions edit

Because of the unprecedented data storage requirements, implementation of the law has been described as impossible and extremely expensive.[16][8] The Russian Post estimated that compliance with the law would cost the organization 500 billion rubles for initial purchases of equipment and 100 billion rubles yearly.[17][18] Implementation of the law by other delivery and freight services was estimated to cost around 180 billion rubles, which is projected to cause 30–40% drop in online number of purchases.[19] Cell service operators will need 2.2 trillion rubles to comply, which will cause a two- or threefold rise in the cost of mobile services for the consumer.[17] Edward Snowden estimated the combined cost of implementation to be 33 billion dollars and predicted that the overall security levels will be unaffected, despite giant affiliated costs.[20]

After Putin signed the law, it turned out that equipment that is needed to store all the data is non-existent not only in Russia, but in the world. Because of that Putin has issued a call for government contracts to Russian companies for the required hardware and software.[21]

Anti-evangelism provisions edit

A number of missionaries have been subject to arrest for violating the law and, upon conviction, have been fined. Donald and Ruth Ossewaarde, independent missionaries working in Oryol, were fined 40,000 rubles (around $700), prompting the couple to leave the country; Sergei Zhuravlyov, a Ukrainian Reformed Orthodox Church of Christ representative, was arrested for engaging in preaching in St. Petersburg; and Ebenezer Tuah of Ghana, the leader of the Christ Embassy church, was arrested and fined 50,000 rubles for conducting baptisms at a sanatorium.[22]

On 9 July 2016, Jim Mulcahy, a 72-year-old American pastor who is the Eastern European coordinator for the U.S.-based Metropolitan Community Church, was arrested and deported under the prohibition of missionary activities at non-religious sites, after advertising and holding a "tea party" in Samara with an LGBT group. Authorities had targeted Mulcahy under suspicions that he was planning to organize a same-sex wedding.[13][23][24]

Criticism and protests edit

Russia's largest telecommunication and internet companies expressed their concerns regarding the negative impacts of the law on their businesses and on the Russian economy on the whole. A Change.org petition to completely cancel Yarovaya's Act collected over 600,000 signatures.[25] Russian Public Initiative petition has been signed more than 100,000 times.[26] A number of protests were organized in cities, including in Novosibirsk, Yekaterinburg, Ufa, Kazan and Volgograd.[27] A 9 August protest in Moscow has seen over 2,000 participants.[28]

Criticisms of anti-evangelism provisions edit

The anti-evangelism provisions of the legislation prompted an outcry of concern and opposition from Russia's Protestant minority, which makes up about 1% of Russia's population.[14] According to experts, the law is likely to be interpreted in a way to block churches other than the Russian Orthodox Church from evangelizing ethnic Russians.[14] Religious denominations with a smaller presence in Russia have long been viewed with hostility by government officials and Russian Orthodox religious authorities. The harsh new restrictions on minority religious groups supplemented the requirements under a 1997 law that mandated registration and administrative procedures, which many religious groups found onerous and expensive to comply with.[29]

Thomas J. Reese, the chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, said that "Neither these measures nor the currently existing anti-extremism law meet international human rights and religious freedom standards" and that the Yarovaya Law "will make it easier for Russian authorities to repress religious communities, stifle peaceful dissent, and detain and imprison people."[30] Faith McDonnell of the Institute on Religion and Democracy in Washington, D.C., said: "The law doesn't do that much to defend from terrorism and only prevents Christians and others who are not [Russian] Orthodox from preaching and proselytizing."[31] U.S. State Department spokeswoman Nicole Thompson wrote that: "We believe that these new amendments will not better protect Russia’s citizens, but are rather part of a troubling Russian trend of intimidation and harassment of civil society and political activists."[31]

The law exempts the government-allied Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church from the measures that it applies to all other religious groups. The autonomous Russian Orthodox Church opposed the law; Archbishop Andrew Maklakov, administrator of the Russian Orthodox Autonomous Church of America, stated: "As the Russian Federation has drifted back to its Soviet roots more and more over the past 25 years, it has increasingly sought to harass, persecute, and destroy any religious organization that it might consider competition to its own 'state church.'"[31]

Criticisms of expanded surveillance provisions edit

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit group that aims to defend civil liberties in the digital world, opposed the Yarovaya package, noting that "opposition to the Yarovaya package has come from many quarters. Technical experts have been united in opposing the law. Russia’s government Internet ombudsman opposed the bill. Putin's own human rights head, Mikhail Fedotov, called upon the Senators of Russia’s Federal Council to reject the bill. ISPs have pointed out that compliance would cost them trillions of rubles."[32] The EFF wrote that because Russia's ISPs, messaging services, and social media platforms "cannot reasonably comply with all the demands of the Yarovaya package, they become de facto criminals whatever their actions. And that, in turn, gives the Russian state the leverage to extract from them any other concession it desires. The impossibility of full compliance is not a bug—it's an essential feature."[32] Human Rights Watch noted the lack of judicial oversight and stated that "these provisions would ultimately jeopardize security, while being ineffective at preventing terrorists from using encryption" as well as "unjustifiably expand surveillance while undermining human rights and cybersecurity."[10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Президент РФ подписал законы, направленные на борьбу с терроризмом".
  2. ^ "Законопроект № 1039149-6" (in Russian). Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  3. ^ "(первое чтение) О проекте федерального закона № 1039101-6 "О внесении изменений в Уголовный кодекс Российской Федерации и Уголовно-процессуальный кодекс Российской Федерации в части установления дополнительных мер противодействия терроризму и обеспечения общественной безопасности" – Система анализа результатов голосований на заседаниях Государственной Думы". vote.duma.gov.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  4. ^ "Под закон Яровой подпадают все облачные сервисы и интернет-магазины | Rusbase" (in Russian). Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  5. ^ "В Совете Федерации предложили перенести вступление в силу "пакета Яровой" на 2023 год" (in Russian). 19 July 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  6. ^ "Draconian Law Rammed Through Russian Parliament". Human Rights Watch. 2016-06-23. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  7. ^ Самохина, Софья; Самохина, Софья. "Борьбу Ирины Яровой с терроризмом подвергли критике". Газета "Коммерсантъ" (in Russian). No. 82. p. 3. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  8. ^ a b c "Russia Asks For The Impossible With Its New Surveillance Laws". 2016-07-19. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  9. ^ a b "ФСБ избавила мессенджеры от сертификации средств шифрования по "закону Яровой"". Interfax.ru (in Russian). 2016-07-20. Retrieved 2017-07-20.
  10. ^ a b "Russia: 'Big Brother' Law Harms Security, Rights". Human Rights Watch. 2016-07-12. Retrieved 2017-07-02.
  11. ^ "Thousands Fasting After Russian President Putin Signs Law Banning Evangelism Outside of Churches". Christian Post. 12 July 2016. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  12. ^ a b c "RUSSIA: Putin signs sharing beliefs, "extremism", punishments". Forum 18. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  13. ^ a b c "Russia's Newest Law: No Evangelizing Outside of Church". Christianity Today. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  14. ^ a b c "Russia's Ban on Evangelism Is Now in Effect". Christianity Today. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  15. ^ "Russia's new 'big brother law' has Christians, Muslims and Jews fearing for their religious freedom". Deseret News. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  16. ^ "Дорогой, неэффективный, нарушающий права граждан". Vedomosti (in Russian). 2016-06-28. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  17. ^ a b ""Почта России" оценила исполнение "закона Яровой" в полтриллиона рублей" (in Russian). Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  18. ^ ""Почте России" придется потратить 500 млрд рублей на исполнение "закона Яровой"". www.forbes.ru. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  19. ^ "Закон Яровой может стоить логистическим компаниям 180 млрд рублей". 2016-07-12. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  20. ^ Khrennikov, Ilya (7 July 2016). "Putin's 'Big Brother' Surveillance Law Criticized by Snowden". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  21. ^ "Достаточного количества оборудования для исполнения "закона Яровой" нет даже за рубежом, сообщили в МЭР". 14 July 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  22. ^ Mark Woods, US missionary's work ended by Russia's anti-evangelism law, Christian Today (September 2, 2016).
  23. ^ Zavadski, Katie (31 July 2016). "Russia Was So Afraid of Gay Marriage, It Kicked Out This Priest". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  24. ^ Levi Bridges (26 July 2016). . Washington Post. Archived from the original on 27 July 2016.
  25. ^ "Петицию против "закона Яровой" за четыре дня подписали 500 000 человек | MacDigger.ru – новости из мира Apple". www.macdigger.ru. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  26. ^ "РОИ :: Отменить "закон Яровой"". www.roi.ru. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  27. ^ "В российских городах прошли акции против антитеррористического "пакета Яровой"". 26 July 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  28. ^ "В Москве на митинг против "пакета Яровой" пришли около двух тысяч человек". 9 August 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  29. ^ "Russia's 'Yarovaya Law' Imposes Harsh New Restrictions On Religious Groups". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  30. ^ "RUSSIA: USCIRF Condemns Enactment of Anti-Terrorism Laws" (Press release). United States Commission on International Religious Freedom. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  31. ^ a b c Fred Lucas (July 20, 2016). "Back to the Soviet Era': Putin's New Law Could Lead to Religious Crackdown". The Daily Signal. The Heritage Foundation.
  32. ^ a b Eva Galperin; Danny O'Brien (July 19, 2016). "Russia Asks For The Impossible With Its New Surveillance Laws". Electronic Frontier Foundation.

External links edit

  • Berg, Evgeny (1 December 2016). "Russia's Controversial 'Yarovaya Package' Targets Missionaries, Threatens Privacy | Legal Dialogue". Legal Dialogue. EU-Russia Civil Society Forum. Retrieved 2017-07-04.
  • "Russia: New Electronic Surveillance Rules". www.loc.gov. Roudik, Peter. Library of Congress Global Legal Monitor. 2016-07-18. Retrieved 2017-07-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • "Russia: New Law Regulates Missionary Work". www.loc.gov. Roudik, Peter. Library of Congress Global Legal Monitor. 2016-07-14. Retrieved 2017-07-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • "Russia: Strengthening of Punishment for Extremism". www.loc.gov. Roudik, Peter. Library of Congress Global Legal Monitor. 2016-07-18. Retrieved 2017-07-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)

yarovaya, 2014, memory, against, rehabilitation, nazism, russian, Закон, Яровой, transliteration, zakon, jarovoy, also, yarovaya, package, russian, federal, bills, passed, 2016, bills, amend, previous, counter, terrorism, laws, separate, laws, which, regulate,. For the 2014 memory law see Law Against Rehabilitation of Nazism The Yarovaya law in Russian Zakon Yarovoj transliteration Zakon Jarovoy also Yarovaya package bag is a set of two Russian federal bills 374 FZ and 375 FZ passed in 2016 1 The bills amend previous counter terrorism laws and separate laws which regulate additional counter terror and public safety measures The public names the law after the last name of one of its creators Irina Yarovaya Yarovaya lawFederal AssemblyLong title On Amendments to the Federal Law On Countering Terrorism and Certain Legislative Acts of the Russian Federation regarding the establishment of additional measures to counter terrorism and ensure public securityCitation374 FZ375 FZTerritorial extentRussiaSigned byPresident Vladimir PutinSigned7 July 2016Commenced20 July 20161 July 2018Legislative historyIntroduced byIrina Yarovaya YR Aleksey Pushkov YR Nadezhda Gerasimova YR First reading24 June 2016 State Duma Second reading29 June 2016 Federation Council Related legislationCriminal Code of RussiaLaw Against Rehabilitation of NazismKeywordsReligious freedom in RussiaStatus Current legislationThe amendments included an expansion of authority for law enforcement agencies new requirements for data collection and mandatory decoding in the telecommunications industry as well as the increased regulation of evangelism including a ban on the performance of missionary activities in non religious settings Contents 1 Legislative history 2 Content 2 1 Penal provisions 2 2 Surveillance provisions 2 3 Anti evangelism provisions 3 Implementation 3 1 Surveillance provisions 3 2 Anti evangelism provisions 4 Criticism and protests 4 1 Criticisms of anti evangelism provisions 4 2 Criticisms of expanded surveillance provisions 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksLegislative history editIn April 2016 Irina Yarovaya together with Aleksei Pushkov and Nadezhda Gerasimova and senator Victor Ozerov introduced a project of legislation that would toughen penalties for extremism and terrorism 2 On 13 May 2016 the law passed after the first reading 3 Prior to that it had received support from the prime minister s cabinet On 7 July it was signed by the President of Russia Vladimir Putin Most of the act s amendments came into effect on 20 July 2016 4 Amendments that require telecom operators to store recordings of phone conversations text messages and users internet traffic up to 6 months were announced to come into force on July 1 2018 However senator Anton Belyakov has submitted a proposal to move the regulations effective date to 2023 because of the extreme amount of data storage technology needed to meet the requirements 5 Content editPenal provisions edit The amendments of the Yarovaya law include lengthening of prison terms for a number of criminal activities introduction of new reasons to deny entry or departure to and from Russia and the introduction of criminal liability for failure to report to law enforcement authorities that someone else has been planning is perpetrating or has perpetrated terrorist activity 6 7 Surveillance provisions edit The Yarovaya amendments require telecom providers to store the content of voice calls data images and text messages for 6 months and their metadata e g time location and message sender and recipients for 3 years 8 9 Online services such as messaging services email and social networks that use encrypted data are required to permit the Federal Security Service FSB to access and read their encrypted communications 8 9 Internet and telecom companies are required to disclose these communications and metadata as well as all other information necessary to authorities on request and without a court order 10 Anti evangelism provisions editThe amendments also include new restrictions on evangelism and missionary work 11 The amendments add a new provision to Russia s Religion Legislation stating that missionary activity may only be performed without hindrance at churches and other religious sites designated by the chapter It is explicitly banned from residential buildings Missionary activity is defined asThe activity of a religious association aimed at disseminating information about its beliefs among people who are not participants members followers in that religious association with the purpose of involving these people as participants members followers It is carried out directly by religious associations or by citizens and or legal entities authorised by them publicly with the help of the media the internet or other lawful means 12 Missionary activities may not be used to pursue violations of public safety the motivation of citizens to refuse to fulfil their civic duties as established by law and to commit other illegal acts suicide or the refusal of medical treatment on religious grounds as aims 12 Missionary activities may only be performed by authorized members of registered religious groups and organizations A group becomes ineligible to perform missionary activities if they have been banned under a court order for practicing extremism or terrorism or have been liquidated Foreign missionaries may only perform missionary activities after registering for a permit from a recognized religious organization 12 13 14 15 Citizens are also required to report unauthorized religious activity to the government or face fines 13 Implementation editSurveillance provisions edit Because of the unprecedented data storage requirements implementation of the law has been described as impossible and extremely expensive 16 8 The Russian Post estimated that compliance with the law would cost the organization 500 billion rubles for initial purchases of equipment and 100 billion rubles yearly 17 18 Implementation of the law by other delivery and freight services was estimated to cost around 180 billion rubles which is projected to cause 30 40 drop in online number of purchases 19 Cell service operators will need 2 2 trillion rubles to comply which will cause a two or threefold rise in the cost of mobile services for the consumer 17 Edward Snowden estimated the combined cost of implementation to be 33 billion dollars and predicted that the overall security levels will be unaffected despite giant affiliated costs 20 After Putin signed the law it turned out that equipment that is needed to store all the data is non existent not only in Russia but in the world Because of that Putin has issued a call for government contracts to Russian companies for the required hardware and software 21 Anti evangelism provisions edit A number of missionaries have been subject to arrest for violating the law and upon conviction have been fined Donald and Ruth Ossewaarde independent missionaries working in Oryol were fined 40 000 rubles around 700 prompting the couple to leave the country Sergei Zhuravlyov a Ukrainian Reformed Orthodox Church of Christ representative was arrested for engaging in preaching in St Petersburg and Ebenezer Tuah of Ghana the leader of the Christ Embassy church was arrested and fined 50 000 rubles for conducting baptisms at a sanatorium 22 On 9 July 2016 Jim Mulcahy a 72 year old American pastor who is the Eastern European coordinator for the U S based Metropolitan Community Church was arrested and deported under the prohibition of missionary activities at non religious sites after advertising and holding a tea party in Samara with an LGBT group Authorities had targeted Mulcahy under suspicions that he was planning to organize a same sex wedding 13 23 24 Criticism and protests editRussia s largest telecommunication and internet companies expressed their concerns regarding the negative impacts of the law on their businesses and on the Russian economy on the whole A Change org petition to completely cancel Yarovaya s Act collected over 600 000 signatures 25 Russian Public Initiative petition has been signed more than 100 000 times 26 A number of protests were organized in cities including in Novosibirsk Yekaterinburg Ufa Kazan and Volgograd 27 A 9 August protest in Moscow has seen over 2 000 participants 28 Criticisms of anti evangelism provisions edit The anti evangelism provisions of the legislation prompted an outcry of concern and opposition from Russia s Protestant minority which makes up about 1 of Russia s population 14 According to experts the law is likely to be interpreted in a way to block churches other than the Russian Orthodox Church from evangelizing ethnic Russians 14 Religious denominations with a smaller presence in Russia have long been viewed with hostility by government officials and Russian Orthodox religious authorities The harsh new restrictions on minority religious groups supplemented the requirements under a 1997 law that mandated registration and administrative procedures which many religious groups found onerous and expensive to comply with 29 Thomas J Reese the chair of the U S Commission on International Religious Freedom said that Neither these measures nor the currently existing anti extremism law meet international human rights and religious freedom standards and that the Yarovaya Law will make it easier for Russian authorities to repress religious communities stifle peaceful dissent and detain and imprison people 30 Faith McDonnell of the Institute on Religion and Democracy in Washington D C said The law doesn t do that much to defend from terrorism and only prevents Christians and others who are not Russian Orthodox from preaching and proselytizing 31 U S State Department spokeswoman Nicole Thompson wrote that We believe that these new amendments will not better protect Russia s citizens but are rather part of a troubling Russian trend of intimidation and harassment of civil society and political activists 31 The law exempts the government allied Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church from the measures that it applies to all other religious groups The autonomous Russian Orthodox Church opposed the law Archbishop Andrew Maklakov administrator of the Russian Orthodox Autonomous Church of America stated As the Russian Federation has drifted back to its Soviet roots more and more over the past 25 years it has increasingly sought to harass persecute and destroy any religious organization that it might consider competition to its own state church 31 Criticisms of expanded surveillance provisions edit The Electronic Frontier Foundation a nonprofit group that aims to defend civil liberties in the digital world opposed the Yarovaya package noting that opposition to the Yarovaya package has come from many quarters Technical experts have been united in opposing the law Russia s government Internet ombudsman opposed the bill Putin s own human rights head Mikhail Fedotov called upon the Senators of Russia s Federal Council to reject the bill ISPs have pointed out that compliance would cost them trillions of rubles 32 The EFF wrote that because Russia s ISPs messaging services and social media platforms cannot reasonably comply with all the demands of the Yarovaya package they become de facto criminals whatever their actions And that in turn gives the Russian state the leverage to extract from them any other concession it desires The impossibility of full compliance is not a bug it s an essential feature 32 Human Rights Watch noted the lack of judicial oversight and stated that these provisions would ultimately jeopardize security while being ineffective at preventing terrorists from using encryption as well as unjustifiably expand surveillance while undermining human rights and cybersecurity 10 See also editMass surveillance in Russia SORM Sovereign Internet LawReferences edit Prezident RF podpisal zakony napravlennye na borbu s terrorizmom Zakonoproekt 1039149 6 in Russian Retrieved 10 August 2016 pervoe chtenie O proekte federalnogo zakona 1039101 6 O vnesenii izmenenij v Ugolovnyj kodeks Rossijskoj Federacii i Ugolovno processualnyj kodeks Rossijskoj Federacii v chasti ustanovleniya dopolnitelnyh mer protivodejstviya terrorizmu i obespecheniya obshestvennoj bezopasnosti Sistema analiza rezultatov golosovanij na zasedaniyah Gosudarstvennoj Dumy vote duma gov ru in Russian Retrieved 2016 08 10 Pod zakon Yarovoj podpadayut vse oblachnye servisy i internet magaziny Rusbase in Russian Retrieved 2016 08 10 V Sovete Federacii predlozhili perenesti vstuplenie v silu paketa Yarovoj na 2023 god in Russian 19 July 2016 Retrieved 2016 08 10 Draconian Law Rammed Through Russian Parliament Human Rights Watch 2016 06 23 Retrieved 2016 08 10 Samohina Sofya Samohina Sofya Borbu Iriny Yarovoj s terrorizmom podvergli kritike Gazeta Kommersant in Russian No 82 p 3 Retrieved 2016 08 10 a b c Russia Asks For The Impossible With Its New Surveillance Laws 2016 07 19 Retrieved 2016 08 10 a b FSB izbavila messendzhery ot sertifikacii sredstv shifrovaniya po zakonu Yarovoj Interfax ru in Russian 2016 07 20 Retrieved 2017 07 20 a b Russia Big Brother Law Harms Security Rights Human Rights Watch 2016 07 12 Retrieved 2017 07 02 Thousands Fasting After Russian President Putin Signs Law Banning Evangelism Outside of Churches Christian Post 12 July 2016 Retrieved 18 September 2016 a b c RUSSIA Putin signs sharing beliefs extremism punishments Forum 18 Retrieved 18 September 2016 a b c Russia s Newest Law No Evangelizing Outside of Church Christianity Today Retrieved 17 September 2016 a b c Russia s Ban on Evangelism Is Now in Effect Christianity Today Retrieved 17 September 2016 Russia s new big brother law has Christians Muslims and Jews fearing for their religious freedom Deseret News Retrieved 17 September 2016 Dorogoj neeffektivnyj narushayushij prava grazhdan Vedomosti in Russian 2016 06 28 Retrieved 2016 08 10 a b Pochta Rossii ocenila ispolnenie zakona Yarovoj v poltrilliona rublej in Russian Retrieved 2016 08 10 Pochte Rossii pridetsya potratit 500 mlrd rublej na ispolnenie zakona Yarovoj www forbes ru Retrieved 2016 08 10 Zakon Yarovoj mozhet stoit logisticheskim kompaniyam 180 mlrd rublej 2016 07 12 Retrieved 2016 08 10 Khrennikov Ilya 7 July 2016 Putin s Big Brother Surveillance Law Criticized by Snowden Bloomberg com Retrieved 2016 08 10 Dostatochnogo kolichestva oborudovaniya dlya ispolneniya zakona Yarovoj net dazhe za rubezhom soobshili v MER 14 July 2016 Retrieved 2016 08 10 Mark Woods US missionary s work ended by Russia s anti evangelism law Christian Today September 2 2016 Zavadski Katie 31 July 2016 Russia Was So Afraid of Gay Marriage It Kicked Out This Priest The Daily Beast Retrieved 17 September 2016 Levi Bridges 26 July 2016 American pastor expelled from Russia in LGBT case Washington Post Archived from the original on 27 July 2016 Peticiyu protiv zakona Yarovoj za chetyre dnya podpisali 500 000 chelovek MacDigger ru novosti iz mira Apple www macdigger ru Retrieved 2016 08 10 ROI Otmenit zakon Yarovoj www roi ru Retrieved 2016 08 10 V rossijskih gorodah proshli akcii protiv antiterroristicheskogo paketa Yarovoj 26 July 2016 Retrieved 2016 08 10 V Moskve na miting protiv paketa Yarovoj prishli okolo dvuh tysyach chelovek 9 August 2016 Retrieved 2016 08 10 Russia s Yarovaya Law Imposes Harsh New Restrictions On Religious Groups Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 21 March 2017 RUSSIA USCIRF Condemns Enactment of Anti Terrorism Laws Press release United States Commission on International Religious Freedom Retrieved 21 March 2017 a b c Fred Lucas July 20 2016 Back to the Soviet Era Putin s New Law Could Lead to Religious Crackdown The Daily Signal The Heritage Foundation a b Eva Galperin Danny O Brien July 19 2016 Russia Asks For The Impossible With Its New Surveillance Laws Electronic Frontier Foundation External links editBerg Evgeny 1 December 2016 Russia s Controversial Yarovaya Package Targets Missionaries Threatens Privacy Legal Dialogue Legal Dialogue EU Russia Civil Society Forum Retrieved 2017 07 04 Russia New Electronic Surveillance Rules www loc gov Roudik Peter Library of Congress Global Legal Monitor 2016 07 18 Retrieved 2017 07 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Russia New Law Regulates Missionary Work www loc gov Roudik Peter Library of Congress Global Legal Monitor 2016 07 14 Retrieved 2017 07 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Russia Strengthening of Punishment for Extremism www loc gov Roudik Peter Library of Congress Global Legal Monitor 2016 07 18 Retrieved 2017 07 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yarovaya law amp oldid 1184207549, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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