A Russian soldier. Picture: ALEXANDER ERMOCHENKO/REUTERS
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Moscow — The Russian chapter of the global environmental campaign group WWF on Thursday said it has cut ties with WWF International after Russia designated WWF as an “undesirable organisation”. 

The label is equivalent to a ban on the group’s activities in Russia.

On Wednesday the prosecutor-general accused WWF-Russia of presenting “security threats in the economic sphere”. It said WWF has waged “tendentious” campaigns against the energy, oil and natural gas industries, and that they were aimed at “shackling” Russia’s economic development.

WWF-Russia had already been labelled a “foreign agent”, a designation that carries connotations of spying. The tag has been applied widely to civil society groups, with the effect of further crushing citizen-led activism, already under broad pressure from authorities.

WWF International said its Russian branch operated as a “nonpartisan national organisation, fully governed and managed by Russian citizens working towards the preservation of the biological diversity of the planet”.

WWF began working in Russia in 1989 and has been involved in big projects to protect endangered species such as Siberian (Amur) tigers, polar bears and European bison.

The organisation said it regretted being accused of posing a security threat, and that “conservation of our natural world is vital, particularly as the climate and biodiversity crises accelerate around the world”.

WWF's fellow environmental group Greenpeace was banned in Russiain May. WWF Russia said it will no longer use the WWF acronym or panda logo.

Reuters

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