27.07.2006 HUMAN RIGHTS AND U.S.-RUSSIAN RELATIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FUTURE
234 Ford House Office Building Washington, D.C.
20515-6460 Sen. Sam Brownback, Chairman Rep. Christopher H.
Smith, Co-Chairman For Immediate Release www.csce.gov Media
Contact: Shelly Han or Mark Kearney 202.225.1901 July 21st,
2006
HUMAN RIGHTS AND U.S.-RUSSIAN RELATIONS: IMPLICATIONS
FOR THE FUTURE
(Washington) - Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS)
and Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-NJ), Chairman and Co-Chairman,
respectively, of the U.S. Helsinki Commission, announced that the
Commission will hold a hearing entitled, “Human Rights and
U.S.-Russian Relations: Implications for the Future,” on Thursday,
July 27, 2006, at 1:00 PM in Room 562 of the Dirksen Senate Office
Building.
Testifying before the Commission are Ms. Felice D.
Gaer, Chair of the United Stations Commission on International
Religious Freedom; Mr. Carl Gershman, President of the National
Endowment for Democracy; Mr. Tom Melia, Deputy Executive Director of
Freedom House; Mr. Fritz Ermarth, former Chairman of the National
Intelligence Council and National Intelligence Officer for USSR and
East Europe, CIA; and Mr. Nikolas Gvosdev, Editor of The National
Interest. A representative of the State Department has been invited
to testify.
The hearing will examine ways the U.S. Government
can live up to its commitment to promote human rights and democratic
governance in Russia while preserving a relationship with Moscow
that advances U.S. interests and is conducive to resolving issues of
importance to both nations and the international
community.
Russia's economic resurgence and re-emergence as
an important political player in the international community has
increased focus on its domestic governance and its place among the
industrial democracies of the world. Actions by Russian law
enforcement authorities to intimidate political opposition and NGOs
during the recent G-8 summit heightened concerns about Russia's
commitment to the principle of governance that characterizes those
democracies.
The Commission on Security and Cooperation in
Europe, also known as the U.S. Helsinki Commission, is an
independent agency of the U.S. Government charged with monitoring
compliance with the Helsinki Final Act and other commitments of the
56 participating States in the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
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