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Russia’s ‘civic death’ plan seeks to erase exiled critics, Human Rights Watch says

RUSSIA is moving to punish dissent far beyond its borders, with a draft law that Human Rights Watch says would amount to a “civic death” sentence for exiled critics. The proposal would strip targeted Russians of basic legal, financial, and consular rights, deepening what HRW describes as a widening crackdown on dissent.

Human Rights Watch says the measure is designed to punish Russians abroad who have already been convicted under repressive laws used to silence political speech. Those laws include charges such as “discrediting” the armed forces, cooperation with “undesirable” organizations, calls for sanctions, and alleged attacks on territorial integrity.

According to HRW, the bill would not simply limit state services; it would sever exiled critics from the practical tools needed to live, work, and protect their property. HRW says the draft would block access to consular services such as passport renewals and notary support, freeze bank accounts and property in Russia, and shut off digital government services.

HRW has framed the proposal as part of a broader state strategy to make dissent costly, relentless, and borderless. The organization says the Kremlin has steadily expanded repressive laws and used them to “crush civic freedoms,” especially since the war in Ukraine escalated.

The rights group’s central warning is blunt: this is not just another legal tool, but a deliberate attempt to erase opposition voices from civic life. In HRW’s view, the law would turn exile into punishment, leaving critics cut off from rights, money, and official identity while Moscow tightens its grip on political expression.

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By The African Mirror

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