Posts Tagged ‘senate’

19
June 2012

US Senate’s ‘Magnitsky’ bill could keep names secret

Reuters

A draft proposal to penalize Russian officials for human rights abuses has been rewritten in the Senate to let the U.S. government keep secret some names on the list of abusers, congressional aides said on Monday.

The reworked Senate version, which could still change, upset some supporters of the legislation to create what is known as the “Magnitsky list.” They said that keeping part of the proposed list secret would neuter the effect of the bill, which is aimed at exposing human rights violators in Russia.

The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee this month approved the “Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act,” named for a 37-year-old anti-corruption lawyer who worked for the equity fund Hermitage Capital. His 2009 death after a year in Russian jails spooked investors and blackened Russia’s image abroad.

The measure would require the United States to deny visas and freeze the U.S. assets of Russians linked to Magnitsky’s death. The bill as originally written in both the House and Senate would make public the list of offenders and broaden it to include other abusers of human rights in Russia.

A reworked draft circulating in the Senate and obtained by Reuters would allow the list to “contain a classified annex if the Secretary (of State) determines that it is necessary for the national security interests of the United States to do so.”

William Browder, CEO of Hermitage Capital, told Reuters he suspected the “classified annex” provision had been inserted at the request of the Obama administration to water down the bill and so avoid offending the Russian government, which opposes the measure.

“The administration is trying to gut the bill, because they’ve been against it from the start. They are trying to make nice with the Russians,” Browder said in a phone conversation from London.

The administration of President Barack Obama argues the bill is unnecessary because the administration has already imposed visa restrictions on some Russians believed to have been involved in Magnitsky’s death. But it has kept their names quiet.

Backers of the Magnitsky bill want the list of human rights violators made public both to shame those on the list and to keep them from doing business with U.S. financial institutions.

The White House is also anxious to keep the push for sanctions on human rights abusers in Russia from slowing down efforts to get congressional approval allowing “permanent normal trade relations” with Russia this year.

Senator Ben Cardin, a Democrat, is the main sponsor of the Magnitsky bill in the Senate, but there was no comment from his office on the draft bill on Monday. The legislation was scheduled to have a vote on Tuesday in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

However, Senate aides said at least one member of the committee may request on Tuesday that the vote be postponed until the committee’s next business meeting, but no date for that has been set.

A Senate Republican aide said there is concern that having part of the list be classified would make steps like the asset freeze unenforceable.

“How can an individual’s assets be frozen, if his or her name cannot be disclosed to financial institutions?” the aide asked. Republicans would try to amend the bill to at least require a justification to Congress for each person put on the classified list, the aide said.

Magnitsky was jailed in 2008 on charges of tax evasion and fraud. His colleagues say these were fabricated by police investigators whom he had accused of stealing $230 million from the state through fraudulent tax returns. The Kremlin’s own human rights council said in 2011 that he was probably beaten to death. займ на карту срочно без отказа hairy women https://zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com/apply-for-payday-loan-online.php онлайн займы

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19
June 2012

U.S. clergy back Magnitsky bill

Interfax

U.S. religious figures have supported the so-called Magnitsky bill imposing visa and financial restrictions on a number of Russian officials, which is due to be debated in the U.S. Congress on Tuesday, Hermitage Capital said.

The letter sent to the Congress by nine religious organizations says that the passage of this bill will help prevent repressions against fighters for religious freedom, the company spokesperson told Interfax on Monday.

According to the letter, the possibility to visit to the United States is a privilege, and foreign officials involved in abuse, murders, restriction of religious freedoms and trampling on other people’s rights, must be deprived of this privilege, the spokesperson said.

The authors hope the sacrifice made by Sergei Magnitsky will not be in vain and will lead to a new important tool in fighting against the trampling on human rights globally, the Hermitage spokesman said.

The document was signed by religious groups representing various faiths, including the United Macedonian Diaspora, the International Religious Liberty Association, the American Islamic Congress, the Hindu American Foundation of Hindus, the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews and the Human Rights Law Foundation, he said.

Earlier, the U.S. Senate Committee on International Relations announced its decision to consider on June 19 the Magnitsky bill, which could impose visa and financial restrictions against a number of Russian officials. The bill is already among the documents due to be voted upon on June 19, the committee told Interfax. быстрые займы на карту hairy girl www.zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com buy over the counter medicines

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18
June 2012

Punish the Russian abusers

Washington Post
PRESIDENT OBAMA’S hopes of forging a partnership with Vladi­mir Putin after his return to the Russian presidency appear to be fading fast. With a meeting between the two presidents due Monday, Russia is rebuffing U.S. appeals for cooperation in stopping the massacres in Syria, while continuing to supply the regime of Bashar al-Assad with weapons. Meanwhile the Kremlin is cracking down on Russians seeking democratic reform or fighting corruption. This month a prominent journalist was forced to flee the country after a senior government official reportedly threatened to kill him.

Apart from occasional public expressions of exasperation, the administration isn’t reacting much to the cold wind from Moscow. Instead it is pressing Congress to pass a piece of legislation much sought by Mr. Putin: repeal of the 1974 Jackson-Vanik amendment, which conditions trade preferences for Russia on free emigration. On its face the repeal makes sense; if the law is not changed, U.S. companies will be disadvantaged when Russia joins the World Trade Organization this summer. But a bill that grants Russia trade preferences and removes human rights conditions hardly seems the right response to Mr. Putin’s recent behavior.

That’s why momentum in Congress appears to be swinging behind a bipartisan initiative to couple the Jackson-Vanik repeal with a new human rights provision. The Magnitsky act, whose prime author has been Sen. Benjamin Cardin (D-Md.), would sanction Russian officials “responsible for extrajudicial killings, torture, or other gross violations of internationally recognized human rights.”

The bill is named after Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer who uncovered a $230 million embezzlement scheme by Russia tax and interior ministry officials, then was imprisoned by those same officials and subjected to mistreatment that led to his death. The bill is due to be taken up Tuesday by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and could later be attached to the Russia trade bill under a deal struck between Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).

The appeal of the legislation is its sharp focus: It will affect only those found to be involved in Mr. Magnitsky’s death or the mistreatment of other Russians fighting corruption or abuses of human rights. It would punish people like the senior law enforcement official who allegedly threatened to kill Sergei Sokolov of the Novaya Gazeta newspaper, then appoint himself investigator of the crime. Those sanctioned will be denied the U.S. visas they prize, and their dollar bank accounts — often used to siphon illicit gains out of the country — will be frozen. Importantly, their names will be published, which could make them pariahs elsewhere in the West.

Aware that the Magnitsky bill is needed to pass the trade legislation, the administration has been seeking to gut the former by introducing language that would allow the State Department to waive sanctions or the publication of names on national security grounds. Some waiver authority may be appropriate if it is narrowly cast; senators are considering a provision that would allow the names of some of those sanctioned to be classified temporarily on a case-by-case basis. What’s most important is that Congress send Mr. Putin and his cadres the message that their lawless behavior will have consequences. онлайн займы срочный займ на карту онлайн https://zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php быстрые займы на карту

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18
June 2012

The Magnitsky Act and Implications for Russia-U.S. Relations

Huffington Post

Throughout the Cold War the U.S. Congress sought to penalize the Soviet Union for its human rights record. Legislation such as the Jackson-Vanik amendment became a long-term influence on bilateral trade between the two countries. That tradition was reinvigorated this past week, when the House Foreign Affairs Committee unanimously approved the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act, in a rare example of bipartisanship. This has potentially important implications for future of bilateral trade with Russia, which is expected to join the World Trade Organization later this year. Passage of the Act just prior to President Obama’s meeting with President Putin in Mexico this coming week adds greater complexity to the cooling bilateral relationship between Russia and the U.S., and enhances the prospect of further deterioration.

The Act is named after Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer representing Hermitage Capital Management, an investment fund and asset management company that was dismantled by Russian authorities after it was accused of tax evasion. Magnitsky implicated top officials in a $230 million tax refund fraud against the Russian government. In 2008 he was arrested and died in prison after spending a year in pretrial detention; the case against him is ongoing posthumously. The U.S. State Department issued visa bans on several dozen Russian officials in connection to the Magnitsky case in 2011. Russia imposed travel bans on several U.S. officials in response.

After the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s approval of the bill, two additional committees (most likely the finance and judiciary committees since it deals with financial sanctions and criminal prosecution) must approve the bill or waive jurisdiction. Once passed in the House, the Senate is expected to introduce its own version of the bill for review.

The Obama administration has been opposed to the Act for two reasons, arguing that it will put U.S. businesses at a disadvantage in Russia, making it harder for them to compete, and possibly prompting the Russian government to favor non-U.S. suppliers or freeze U.S. corporate assets in the country. Adoption of the Act may also be inconsistent, if not oppositional, to another bill, which would grant Russia Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) as required under WTO rules.

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18
June 2012

A real hero of Russia

The Hawk Eye

Supposedly nobody likes a snitch. Presumably nobody who’s honest likes crooks either. That poses a moral conundrum. Not for the corrupt and the crooked infecting society. They’re incorrigible. But it does raise a problem for decent whistle blowers who too often pay a bigger price than the bad people they out.

That sticky moral dilemma can have negative effects in democracies where honesty and integrity are supposed to be valued above all else, and also in corrupt autocracies where they are not.

In many places, being honest will get you not just shunned and fired, but killed. That’s particularly true in Russia, where the government and the businesses it controls under President Vladimir Putin have become dens of thieves, and some say murderers too.

Putin recently won a new term in a rigged election. He was in China this week commiserating with the masters of Russia’s old Cold War ally about how the world – and the United States in particular – gives neither of them sufficient respect and keeps telling them what to do: Like stop behaving like a mafia, and stop beating, terrorizing and jailing political dissidents and their families.

Putin is particularly upset because the U.S. Congress is threatening to punish some really rich Russian officials for stealing a foreign-run investment fund and allegedly murdering the tax lawyer who uncovered the crime.

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13
June 2012

Syria Crisis and Putin’s Return Chill U.S. Ties With Russia

New York Times

Sitting beside President Obama this spring, the president of Russia gushed that “these were perhaps the best three years of relations between Russia and the United States over the last decade.” Two and a half months later, those halcyon days of friendship look like a distant memory.

Gone is Dmitri A. Medvedev, the optimistic president who collaborated with Mr. Obama and celebrated their partnership in March. In his place is Vladimir V. Putin, the grim former K.G.B. colonel whose return to the Kremlin has ushered in a frostier relationship freighted by an impasse over Syria and complicated by fractious domestic politics in both countries.

The tension over Syria has been exacerbated by an accusation by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday that Russia is supplying attack helicopters to the government of President Bashar al-Assad as it tries to crush an uprising. Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, rejected the assertions on Wednesday, saying that Moscow was supplying only defensive weapons and countering that the United States was arming the region.

The back-and-forth underscored the limits of Mr. Obama’s ability to “reset” ties between the two countries, as he resolved to do when he arrived in office. He has signed an arms control treaty, expanded supply lines to Afghanistan through Russian territory, secured Moscow’s support for sanctions on Iran and helped bring Russia into the World Trade Organization. But officials in both capitals noted this week that the two countries still operated on fundamentally different sets of values and interests.

The souring relations come as Mr. Obama and Mr. Putin are preparing to meet for the first time as presidents next week on the sidelines of a summit meeting in Mexico. With Mr. Obama being accused by Mitt Romney, his Republican presidential opponent, of going soft on Russia and Mr. Putin turning to anti-American statements in response to street protests in Moscow, the Mexico meeting is being seen as a test of whether the reset has run its course.

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13
June 2012

Who Is Magnitsky?

Washington Council on Foreign Relations

Yesterday was a big day in terms of efforts to establish permanent normal trade relations with Russia: Senators Baucus, Thune, Kerry and McCain introduce legislation to make this goal a reality. And with the House Ways and Means Committee hearing coming up (next Wednesday, June 20), it’s beginning to feel like there’s momentum to ensure that – when Russia joins the WTO – U.S. businesses will have the same access to the Russia market as everyone else.

But one name that you’re going to hear a lot before the (hopefully) successful conclusion of this policy discussion is “Magnitsky.” As in “Magnitsky Act will be linked with Russian trade bill in Senate” (for example). And, since most of you aren’t following U.S.-Russia policy as closely as you’re following the daily Mariners box score (although I’m not sure which one I prefer), you know that you can always rely on your faithful State of Trade Blog for the easy answer.

Senate Bill 1039 is entitled the “Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act,” which is intended to ban U.S. visas to Russian officials engaged in “gross human rights violation.” The legislation is named for the anti-corruption lawyer who died in a Russian prison, after allegedly being tortured, two years ago. The Act would lay out specific provisions about who can be banned, for what reasons and the process for getting such a ban in place.

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13
June 2012

Senate panel to vote next week on trade-related Russia bill, Iraq ambassador nominee

The Hill

A Senate panel on Tuesday will move human-rights legislation that lawmakers of both parties say is critical to gaining their support for establishing normal trade ties with Russia.

The Senate Foreign Affairs Committee will vote on the so-called Magnitsky bill, named after a whistleblowing Russian lawyer who died in police custody, along with a number of other bills and ambassador nominations. The news comes after Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) on Tuesday announced his intention to pair the human-rights bill with the trade legislation, which must clear his committee.

The Magnitsky legislation targets human-rights violators in Russia with financial and travel sanctions. The House Foreign Affairs Committee passed the bill last week.

Without it, several lawmakers say, they cannot support establishing normal permanent trade relations with Russia, which would put U.S. companies at a disadvantage when Russia joins the World Trade Organization this summer. The Obama administration’s top trade negotiator has called for a clean vote on the trade issue.

The Foreign Affairs panel is also slated to consider President Obama’s controversial nominee to lead the world’s largest embassy, in Baghdad. Brett McGurk, 39, has come under criticism for his inexperience — he has never served as ambassador — and more recently for an affair he conducted with a reporter, now his wife, who covered him while he was stationed in Iraq in 2008.

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13
June 2012

Bipartisan Senate Bill Would Lift Title IV For Russia; Business Group Supports PNTR

BNA

A bipartisan group of senators June 12 introduced legislation that would terminate the application of Title IV of the Trade Act of 1974 to Russia, and the Business Roundtable the same day launched a 50-day campaign to urge Congress to approve permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) with Russia by the August recess.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.), International Trade Subcommittee ranking member John Thune (R-S.D.), Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-Mass.), and Armed Services Committee ranking member John McCain (R-Ariz.) unveiled the legislation, “To authorize the extension of nondiscriminatory treatment (normal trade relations treatment) to products of the Russian Federation.” The bill has not yet been numbered.

Normal trade relations with Russia currently are subject to an annual review under Section 402 of the Trade Act, known as the Jackson-Vanik Amendment, which was designed by lawmakers to link trade with human rights by monitoring Jewish emigration from the former Soviet Union.

The three-page bill terminating application of all sections in Title IV would allow the president to grant by proclamation PNTR for Russia. PNTR is required for U.S. firms to receive all of the benefits of the Russian World Trade Organization accession protocol.

In a June 12 briefing with reporters, the Business Roundtable expressed quiet confidence that the legislation would pass prior to the August recess so PNTR can be granted before Russia officially joins the WTO.

The group’s “50 Days for Trade” campaign includes a Russia PNTR action center, a daily “state spotlight” focusing on trade opportunities, targeted media outreach to all 50 states, stepped-up outreach by Business Roundtable chief executive officers, coordination of advocacy efforts with state governors, a national grass-roots outreach campaign, print and online advertising, as well as a national op-ed campaign.

Roundtable President John Engler released the results of a May 26-27 Winston Group poll that found 70 percent of Americans favored granting PNTR to Russia this summer.

Baucus, Kerry Plan to Combine Bills

Baucus and Kerry simultaneously unveiled their strategy of advancing human rights legislation along with the trade bill by adding the full text of the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act (S. 1039) as an amendment to the bill that would terminate Title IV of the Trade Act. The Magnitsky bill had been referred to Kerry’s Foreign Relations Committee.

Baucus acknowledged in a June 12 letter to four sponsors of the bill providing for sanctions—in the form of visa denials and asset freezes for human rights violators—that many lawmakers are rallying around the position that repeal of Jackson-Vanik for Russia must be accompanied by passage of the Magnitsky Act.

Baucus told the four senators sponsoring the act—Benjamin Cardin (D-Md.), McCain, Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.), and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.)—that he would allow open debate and votes on germane amendments during the Finance Committee markup of the Russia PNTR-Magnitsky legislation. He also said he would urge the Senate majority leader to schedule time prior to the August recess for the Senate to debate and vote on the combined legislation.

Baucus added that he would work with his House counterparts in any conference to ensure that the final version of the legislation includes the Magnitsky Act in a form that is acceptable to its bipartisan co-sponsors.

Extension of MFN Tariffs Not Certain

Under WTO rules, Russia would not be required to grant all of its accession terms to the United States absent PNTR, which in international agreements is referred to as unconditional most favored nation (MFN) status.

Russia is expected to ratify the accession protocol on or before July 23 and become a full WTO member 30 days after ratification. Russian officials have said that they will not extend all the accession terms to the United States until PNTR is granted.

Currently, tariffs are covered by the 1992 U.S.-Russia Agreement on Trade Relations that provided for reciprocal MFN treatment of each others’ products.

Although Russia is expected to uphold the commitment and extend tariffs agreed to in the WTO accession protocol to the United States based on the agreement, a trade expert told reporters at the Business Roundtable briefing this is not certain.
He noted, moreover, that PNTR is critical for U.S. companies to benefit from the commitments in the WTO accession agreement related to intellectual property rights, sanitary and phytosanitary standards, investments, and dispute settlement, among other issues.
In addition to the Roundtable, numerous business groups expressed immediate support for granting PNTR to Russia, including the U.S.-Russia Business Council, which serves as the secretariat for the Coalition for U.S.-Russia Trade that has been in the forefront of lobbying efforts on the issue.
The National Foreign Trade Council, the National Association of Manufacturers, the Emergency Committee for American Trade, the Coalition of Service Industries, the Technology Industry Council, and the Distilled Spirits Council all issued statements that back PNTR and urge congressional passage of legislation that would approve it.

Kirk Gives Bill Warm Reception

U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk welcomed the introduction in the Senate of the bill to terminate the application of the Jackson-Vanik Amendment and authorize the president to extend PNTR to Russia.

“Passing this bill will ensure that U.S. businesses, ranchers, farmers, and workers will not be at a disadvantage in the Russian market compared to their global competitors,” Kirk said. “We will continue to work with Congress so that Americans can reap the full benefits of Russia’s WTO membership.”

A USTR spokesman said in an emailed statement that the administration priority is for the Congress to lift the Cold War-era Jackson-Vanik Amendment and authorize the president to extend PNTR to Russia, but democracy, human rights, and civil society are important components of the U.S. relationship with Russia.

“We will continue to work with Congress on how best to advance these important priorities,” the spokesman said.

Eight members of the Senate Finance Committee urged Baucus in a June 12 letter to work to address a number of outstanding issues with Russia, such as barriers to U.S. exports, corruption, and its support for the Syrian government.

The letter, spearheaded by the committee’s ranking member Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and signed by Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), Olympia Snowe (R-Maine), John Cornyn (R-Texas), Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), and Richard Burr (R-N.C.), said that satisfactorily addressing these issues is imperative before the Senate moves forward with legislative action.

“We believe it will be necessary to satisfactorily address these and other issues if Congress is to successfully navigate a path toward granting PNTR to Russia,” the senators wrote. “We hope you will work with us as we consider legislative options to address remaining concerns.”

For More InformationThe legislation can be found at: http://www.finance.senate.gov/legislation/details/?id=c7b50a1a-5056-a032-5231-0a45f92b7e1a.The letter from Baucus on the Magnitsky Act can be found at http://op.bna.com/itr.nsf/r?Open=rbri-8v7szq.The letter from Hatch and the other senators to Baucus can be found at http://op.bna.com/der.nsf/r?Open=palo-8v7tv9.The Business Roundtable website for its Russia PNTR campaign is http://pntr.businessroundtable.org/. unshaven girl payday loan https://zp-pdl.com https://www.zp-pdl.com hairy women

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