The Russian State Duma (lower house of parliament) has adopted the bill that will introduce fines for disseminating maps that “dispute Russia’s territorial integrity” in its first reading.
The bill amends the law on countering extremism. Maps as well as other documents and images that “dispute Russia’s territorial integrity” will be classified as extremist.
Russians will face a fine of between 1,000 and 3,000 rubles (€13.5-40) or up to 15 days of arrest, officials will be fines 2,000-5,000 rubles (€27-67), legal entities will have to pay between 100,000 and 1 million rubles (€1,310-13,100).
“We have been lately seeing maps and other images being actively disseminated that dispute that Crimea, the Kuril Islands, and other territories are a part of Russia. It is especially dangerous when these materials are focused on children, as happened with children’s wallpaper that was sold in a popular retail chain, where Crimea was labelled as a part of Ukraine.”