Russia adds 200 Jehovah's Witnesses to 'extremism,' 'terrorism' list

Hundreds of Jehovah's Witnesses in Russia have been added to a list of "Persons Involved in Extremism or Terrorism," according to the organization.

The latest crackdown on the religious group blacklists believers from the country's financial system. Jehovah's Witnesses were officially banned in 2017, and the Kremlin continues to use extremism laws to crack down on opposition activists and religious minorities.

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"Clearly, Russia has effectively reinstated its darkest period of history by relentlessly persecuting Jehovah’s Witnesses, as did its intolerant Soviet predecessors,” Jarrod Lopes, a spokesman for the Jehovah's Witnesses world headquarters in the United States, told The Associated Press.

Jehovah's Witnesses sing songs at the beginning of the meeting in Rostov-on-Don. Although Rostov-on-Don is only 80 km away from Taganrog, the organization is not banned there, and people are free to gather and hold meetings. 16 Jehovah's Witnesses are accused of extremist activity in Taganrog, Russia, 80 km away from Rostov-on-Don. (Photo by Alexander Aksakov/For The Washington Post via Getty Images).

More than 200 Jehovah's Witnesses were added to the register, which currently contains more than 9,500 names. It doesn't state a person's affiliation with an organization.

After Russia's financial intelligence agency, Rosfinmonitoring, put them on the list -- which they say is based on names given to them by law enforcement -- hundreds of members have been subjected to raids, arrests, and prosecution.

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So far, 24 members have been convicted, nine of whom were sentenced to prison, and more than 300 are currently under investigation.

Rosfinmonitoring officials would neither confirm nor deny blacklisting Jehovah's Witnesses to The Associated Press, saying that they add people to the register based on the information law enforcement provides them with.

This crackdown continues, despite Russian President Vladimir Putin's promise to look into “this complete nonsense."

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“Jehovah's Witnesses are Christians, too, so I don't quite understand why persecute them," Putin said in 2018 at a meeting with the Presidential Council for Human Rights.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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