Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

. Last Updated: 05/17/2013

German NGOs Need Work Permits

German nongovernmental organizations operating in Russia are facing bureaucratic troubles because their foreign staff is now required to obtain work permits.

In 2006, Germany reached an agreement with Russia to allow the heads of NGOs to perform their duties in the country without a work permit.

The NGOs became aware of the new permit requirement only when some of them applied for new visas this summer, said Jens Siegert, who heads the Moscow office of the BЪll Foundation, a German pro-democracy group.

Some German NGO workers may be forced to leave the country because they won't get work permits before their current visas expire, said Siegert, whose own visa expires in December.

Work permits for foreigners from outside the Commonwealth of Independent States typically take three months to obtain from the Federal Migration Service.

Another NGO director who might have to leave is Marcus Ehm of the Hanns-Seidel Foundation, Siegert said.

Ehm was on an official visit to Germany this week, and a spokesman for the Bavaria-based organization said by telephone from Munich that he would not comment on the issue.

The German Embassy also declined to comment. A spokeswoman merely said, "Talks are ongoing with relevant authorities."

The heads of other foreign NGOs have been required to obtain work permits since 2006. At that time, the Kremlin was imposing stricter rules for foreign NGOs, and Berlin insisted that an exception be made.

The agreement stipulated that German nationals who head their NGO's office can get their work visas without work permits. German NGOs are still not required to obtain work permit quotas.

In Moscow, there are currently six German NGOs affiliated with political parties.

The Konrad-Adenauer Foundation belongs to Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats, while the Hanns-Seidel Foundation is from her Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union.

The Free Democrats run the Friedrich Naumann Foundation, while the Social Democrats have the Friedrich Ebert Foundation. The BЪll foundation belongs to the Green party, and the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation is run by the Left Party.

Related articles:



comments powered by Disqus



Also in News

Q&A: Baltika Boss Isaac Sheps Likes to Be Challenged

Isaac Sheps, CEO of Russia's largest brewer Baltika, says that his job is "selling fun." The fun materializes when a waiter brings several pints of an amber-colored liquid.

Rosbank Bribery Scandal Highlights Need for Ethics Enforcement

A bribery scandal at French lender Societe Generale's Russian entity Rosbank shows that stricter measures should be implemented by both Western and Russian companies to enforce compliance with their codes of conduct, experts said.

Russian and American Spies Square Off

The embarrassing arrest of a suspected CIA officer in Moscow is the latest reminder that the U.S. and Russia are engaged in an espionage battle with secret tactics, spying devices and training that sometimes isn't enough to avoid being caught.

Putin's Patriotism: Duma May Make Criticism of WWII Illegal

The State Duma has ordered an evaluation of a comment made by opposition politician Leonid Gozman in which he compared a Soviet intelligence agency to Adolf Hitler's SS on the grounds that the comment may hurt the image of Russia's military history.

U.S., Russia and Iran Tangle to Save Olympic Wrestling

Russia, Iran and the United States — rivals on the world stage — joined together in an unlikely alliance Wednesday inside New York's Grand Central Terminal train station for a wrestling exhibition to try to save their sport from being dropped in the Olympics.

What the Papers Say, May 17, 2013

A roundup of today's Russian-language newspapers



print




Mмost Read
advertising
Moscow Directory
DELIKATNY PEREEZD

Local & intercity moves...

LA BOTTEGA

Over 170 wines on the wine list, mainly from Italy, France and Spain...