The law of the Russian Federation does not provide the possibility to suspend the ban for organizations recognized as terrorist. But the new law will eliminate this legal loophole.
The Russian State Duma adopted in the second and third, final reading a law that provides the possibility to exclude the Afghan Taliban movement from the list of organizations banned in Russia. It was found out on Tuesday, December 17.
The agreed document indicates that the ban on the activities of organizations included in the unified federal list as terrorists can be temporarily terminated by a court decision. The basis for such a decision is a statement from the Russian Prosecutor’s Office.
The law of the Russian Federation does not provide the possibility to suspend the ban for organizations recognized as terrorist. And the changes proposed by the law aim to eliminate this legal gap.
Earlier, Russian dictator Vladimir Putin called the Taliban an ally of the Russian Federation “in the fight against terrorism.” In his opinion, the Taliban is interested in “everything is stable” in Afghanistan.
Also, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov explained the idea of excluding the Taliban from the list of banned organizations.
Source: korrespondent

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