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Georgian Civil Society calls on to oppose repressive laws in Kyrgyzstan

Civil society organizations of Georgia made an appeal in which they call on the international community to join and support the Kyrgyz media and civil society, and speak out against the violation of human rights and adoption of repressive laws in the Kyrgyz Republic. More than 60 organizations have already signed the appeal.

As the civic activists note, this poses substantial risk in shutting down free civil society in Kyrgyzstan amid already existing repressive laws, by endangering the freedom of speech, freedom of association, as well as hampering the normal work of critical media, civil society and civic activists.

According to the analysis of the Kyrgyz lawyers, civil society and other experts, the amendment package is about 90 percent identical with the 2012 so-called «agent law» introduced in Russia (which was judged as contradicting the international principles of law in the decision of the ECHR in June 2022), and therefore contradicts the international norms of law (including Articles 20 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 11 of the European Convention of Human Rights, Article 22 of the International Pact on Civil and Political Rights).

The legislative amendment in Kyrgyzstan was heavily criticized in OSCE/ODIHR and Venice Commission reports, which reiterated that adoption of such legal amendments will cause shutdown of independent media, civil society, and will introduce total control of the government over the civil society at large.

As noted, in the past few months, the repressions against the Kyrgyz civil society — media and the NGOs has substantially increased, including criminal persecution, extraditions, multi-million court cases, smear campaigns and cyber bullying by fake social media accounts, as well as organized protests against the free civil society, where threats of violence were voiced openly, without appropriate intervention by the police.

In the past year alone, Kyrgyzstan has dropped by 50 points in the rating of Reporters without Borders in a single year, taking 122nd place among 180 countries.

«We, the civil society of Georgia — media, NGOs, activists, personally know the dangers and risks of such shrinking of the space for civil society, struggling through the similar developments since February 2023 when the similar bill was introduced in Georgia. It is clear that the challenges facing our countries follow the same pattern and thus must be answered with joint efforts, to maintain hard-won independence, democracy and human rights in our countries at the time, where each island of freedom represents substantial hope for human rights activists in the region. We call upon our international partners — international and national organizations, media, organizations and activists, to join in supporting Kyrgyz media and civil society through among others, spreading the information and mobilizing international community against deterioration of the human rights violations and against repressive laws in Kyrgyzstan, as prevention of such developments in other countries, including in Georgia,» the appeal says.

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