
PAPER CHASE NEWSBURST |  
|
Serious law. Primary sources. Global perspective. |
|
|

 |

|
Monday, February 06, 2006 |

Russia parliament considers laws to prevent extremism, racism
Holly Manges Jones at 11:40 AM ET

[JURIST] A lawmaking committee in the Russian parliament is considering legislation to tackle the country's increasing problem with racism and extremism, according to the chairman of committee in the State Duma [official website, in Russian]. The lower parliamentary house is reacting to recent events in Russia [JURIST news archive] indicating an increase in extremist activity, including deadly attacks on dark-skinned foreigners and an attack on a Moscow synagogue [BBC report] by a man carrying a knife. The list of proposed laws include imposing harsher punishments for the distribution of extremist materials on the Internet and to the media and making recruiting to extremist groups a crime. Before the Duma committee's proposals can be debated before the entire house of parliament, they must be reviewed by the Russian government and the Constitutional Court [backgrounder]. AP has more.


Link |
|
|
print |
subscribe |
|
latest newscast |
Facebook page

| For a one-stop snapshot of the latest legal news that matters, with breaking documents, new legal videos, live law-related webcasts, commentary by expert law professors and more - all updated through the day in real time, with no ads and no registration barriers - visit JURIST's homepage and check back often... |
|
|

ABOUT | |
|
 | 
Paper Chase is JURIST's real-time legal news service, powered by a team of 30 law student reporters and editors led by law professor Bernard Hibbitts at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law. As an educational service, Paper Chase is dedicated to presenting important legal news and materials rapidly, objectively and intelligibly in an accessible, ad-free format.
|
|
|