During his tour through Australia, Robert Amsterdam was featured in this article in the daily newspaper The Age:
Call to condemn Russia over human rights An international human rights lawyer is calling on the Australian government to impose strict conditions on a new uranium deal with Russia and condemn the country’s human rights abuses. Canadian lawyer Robert Amsterdam is in Australia to hold talks with government officials about their role in dealing with what he says is the departure from the rule of law in Russia. Mr Amsterdam is defence lawyer for one of the world’s highest-profile political prisoners, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former chief executive of Russian oil giant Yukos. Mr Amsterdam said Mr Khodorkovsky has been jailed because of his vocal opposition to the President Vladimir Putin’s regime and his support for pro-democracy parties and organisations. Since his arrest by the secret police and deportation in 2005, on the last day of his client’s appeal, Mr Amsterdam has set out to inform the world about the actions of the Russian government, which he says is rapidly moving towards authoritarianism. “One of the things I swore to myself when I was being deported was not to remain silent about not only the trial that I had been (involved) with but what I had witnessed,” Mr Amsterdam told AAP. He said that included colleagues jailed, murdered and disbarred, and his clients’ illegal incarceration and stabbing because of their opposition to the Russian regime. Mr Amsterdam said Australia had a role to play in addressing the situation in Russia, including ensuring that a new uranium deal with Russia was tied to a condition of improving democracy. In April, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer revealed the government may expand its uranium deal with Russia, allowing Australian producers to supply Russia’s nuclear power industry. “In respect of the uranium deal (Australia should impose) conditionality, in other words, making sure that the Kremlin’s control of this uranium is conditional on an improvement of the democratic situation in Russia,” Mr Amsterdam said. Mr Amsterdam said public condemnation of Russia’s behaviour by the federal government would also help. “Even the simple pronouncement of what’s going on in Russia by responsible members of the government dramatically helps the situation in Russia,” he said. “It is the silence of the west and the complicity of some of our business community … that is to some significant extent also complicit in what’s going on in Russia today.” He said Australia should care about the actions of the Russian government because Russia is a major nuclear power, and it’s one of Australia’s only resources and commodities competitors. On top of that, he said, Australia has an obligation as a signatory to the UN charter on civil and political rights. “Mr Putin will be coming to the APEC meeting and I think it’s important for people to understand that Russia’s departure from the rule of law and Russia’s move away from a free market in terms of energy has long term implications to the future of Australia,” he said. “Russia has declared an energy war on four or five of the governments of Europe just recently, they’ve declared cyber war on Estonia, and last week they threatened Europe with re-targeting missiles. “You simply can’t close your eyes to what’s happening to human rights in Russia and carry on as if business is usual.”