Russia

Putin signs bill giving presidents lifetime immunity

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

VLADIMIR PUTIN. Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting on the spread of COVID-19 in Russia, via a teleconference call at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence outside Moscow on April 13, 2020.

File photo by Alexey Druzhinin/Sputnik/AFP

Prior to the bill, presidents are only immune from prosecution for crimes committed while in office

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, December 23, signed legislation that will grant former presidents lifetime immunity once they leave office. 

The bill, which was published online Tuesday, gives former presidents and their families immunity from prosecution for crimes committed during their lifetime. 

They will also be exempt from questioning by police or investigators, as well as searches or arrests.

The legislation was part of constitutional amendments that were approved this summer in a nationwide vote that allow Putin, 68, to remain president until 2036.

Prior to the bill becoming law, former presidents were immune from prosecution only for crimes committed while in office. 

Now a former president can still be stripped of immunity if accused of treason or other grave crimes and the charges are confirmed by the Supreme and Constitutional courts.

But the legislation Putin signed on Tuesday will additionally grant former presidents a lifetime seat in the Federation Council or senate, a position that assures immunity from prosecution upon leaving the presidency. 

Last month the pending bills sparked rumors that the longtime Russian leader is planning to step down because of poor health – a claim the Kremlin denied.

On Tuesday the lower house State Duma passed legislation making information about employees of Russia’s judicial system, law enforcement and regulatory and military bodies confidential.

The bill now requires Putin’s signature to become law, a step that is considered a formality.

It comes a day after opposition figure Alexei Navalny said he telephoned an alleged security agent and tricked him into admitting the Federal Security Service (FSB) tried to kill him in August by poisoning.

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Navalny says he tricked spy into admitting poisoning

Navalny says he tricked spy into admitting poisoning

Navalny said he had gained access to the security agent’s phone number from leaked logs and travel records.

The Kremlin critic later published the agent’s alleged address and phone number, actions that would become illegal under the newly proposed legislation. – Rappler.com

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