Undesirables
On 22 June, the Russian Prosecutor General’s Office labelled the WWF an “undesirable organisation,” a designation even more serious than the “foreign agent” title it had held since March. Justifying the decision, the office wrote that WWF Russia was publishing “biassed assessments aimed at shackling the economic development of Russia.”
On May 19, Russia also added fellow environmental giant Greenpeace to the list of “undesirable” organisations. As a result of the label, Greenpeace closed their Russian office, writing that the designation made the “continuation of any Greenpeace activities in Russia illegal.”
The official government memo had claimed that Greenpeace posed “a threat to the foundations of the constitutional order and security of the Russian Federation.”
“Actually, the exact opposite is true,” environmental activist Dmitri Lisitsyn wrote on Facebook when the decision was announced. Greenpeace protects Russian citizens against threat, he wrote, working to prevent legislation “detrimental to Russia and its citizens.” Lisitsyn had been the head of Sakhalin Ecowatch, an environmental group that the government labelled a foreign agent and then shut down — along with others like the “42” movement and “Friends of the Baltic” — in 2022.
Now, the state’s repressive machine is progressing from these little-known organisations to the giants of the conservation scene. Announcing the closure of its office, Greenpeace expressed its categorical disagreement with the authorities’ statement. It sent a letter to its supporters, warning them that an affiliation with Greenpeace could be “dangerous” for them.