Beyond Resistance
My name is Anya Sarang. I am a health and human rights activist, the president of the Andrey Rylkov Foundation. Me and my friend Tanya Ivanova have cofounded ARF in 2009 when the Russian Ministry of Health has officially rejected the international best practice on HIV prevention and we decided to take a more activist approach to reshaping community health response in the new political realities. Before that I worked with international organizations such as Médecins Sans Frontières who set up first HIV prevention interventions in Russia. I have an MSc in Drugs and Drug Policy from the University of London, an MSc in Medical Anthropology and Sociology from the University of Amsterdam, and while I’m mostly a community activist, I do qualitative research whenever possible, with focus on the vulnerable communities, health, human rights, gender, gender based violence and other urgent issues and have published around 30 scientific papers.
Russia's State Anti-Drug Strategy promotes social intolerance to drug use which drives ill-treatment, discrimination, police abuse, over-incarceration and health crisis. Our mission is to clean up the mess caused by Russia’s iron-fisted drugs policy. Our philosophy is harm reduction. We support people in achieving their goals: rights, health, solidarity. Due to political pressure on the civil society, we are the only NGO that keeps providing essential services to people who use drugs in Moscow and loudly advocating for drug policy reform. We found our way to sustain resilient services and human rights work through the ongoing dark years of politically-driven conservative ideology, war on drugs and on the civil society. We would be happy if we could elevate the humanity by contributing our experience, ideas, political and social practice towards a more humane society driven by equality, dignity for all and compassion; free of police brutality, terror and mass incarceration.
Russia has among the highest levels of drug abuse in the world and the worst HIV crisis outside Africa, and along with Ukraine is one of the few corners of the globe where cases are actually growing. Sharing syringes is still the main driver of the epidemic contributing to over half of the infections. Drug overdoses reach 9.000 per year. The government opposes internationally approved evidence-based interventions, such as harm reduction, opioid substitution treatment and naloxone distribution. Police behave with impunity, extorting or blackmailing Russian citizens, or planting drugs. This was highlighted last year with Ivan Golunov, a journalist accused of dealing drugs, a case that drew attention across the globe and who was eventually released due to Putin’s personal intervention. Unfortunately, 120.100 other people who went to prisons in 2019 for insignificant drug crimes mostly fabricated by police were not as lucky. A large number of the population are denied healthcare and basic human rights, falling victim to AIDS, tuberculosis and overdoses. All of these problems are the result of Russia’s draconian drug policy, which we try to mitigate and challenge through harm reduction, outreach work, legal support and more.
Our work has several components. The most important is our daily street outreach, direct communication with the most poor and vulnerable drug users in Moscow. This involves standing around pharmacies and other known hotspots, handing out condoms and clean syringes as well as naloxone, which can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose. We provide Street Lawyers consultations through our network of lawyers and community paralegals, we empower people to stand for their rights – this is particularly important in Russia, where police routinely fabricate drug cases and behave with impunity. Being on the street allows us to document human rights abuses and violations of multiple international conventions that Russia has promised to abide by, but doesn’t. We report this to the public, to the International human rights bodies and fight for justice in the European Court on Human Rights. Finally, we campaign to change public attitude to drugs as an unsolvable problem, to smash stigma, end the war on drugs, mass incarceration and extend support. We stir and inform the wide pubic debates on drug policy and do a lot of work with the (more) independent press in Russia and internationally.
In Russia problematic drug use marks the most poor, vulnerable, criminalized, stigmatized and unprotected population with the size between 2-4 million (the epi data was not available since the international organizations were pushed from the country in mid-2000s). The COVID crisis has proved again that this group will be the first to be thrown out of the ship when the government starts rationing help. According to our COVID surveys many immediately lost jobs and any economic means, did not have any safety nets, were denied access to dependency treatment, were abused by police. The opioid substitution treatment is prohibited by law and people with opioid dependency went into torturous cold turkey withdrawals.
We have carefully built meaningful connections within the communities during the 11 years of daily outreach work. Most of our staff and volunteers are from the community. Our simple services save lives. In 2019 only, we received reports about 396 lives saved thanks to naloxone we semi-legally distribute. We adjust services to the most urgent needs – in 2013 we initiated Street Lawyers, in 2014 – a family project, supporting parents with drug problems, in 2019 - a chemsex project, in 2020 - mental health and GBV work.
- Elevating opportunities for all people, especially those who are traditionally left behind
Our project builds empathy, understanding and solidarity towards the most stigmatised and marginalised group in Russia. We ask to continue a challenging debate - to hear the voices of those who traditionally were only despised and marginalised, to build solidarity. Through this comes understanding that extending attention, support and resources to the most unprivileged is key to being a human community.Together with our partners, we hope to achieve the political environment where even the more authoritarian regimes, such as Russia or Iran or the Philippines have to revise their drug policies because the public can not be fooled any longer.
The Andrey Rylkov Foundation for Health and Social Justice was born in 2009, after the Russian Minister of Health announced that Russia wouldn’t follow recommendations from the World Health Organization (WHO) to implement harm reduction programmes for people who use drugs and opioid substitution treatment. We started out with a group of friends/ activists who’d already spent years working in harm reduction and HIV but wanted to do something more pro-active that would change the country’s approach to drugs.
Our inspiration was our friend Andrey Rylkov an activist and drug user who passed away in 2006. Andrey and FrontAIDS movement that he ignited were the Russian Act up! Frontaids held radical action on Red Square and Ministry of Health and other visible spots and achieved a breakthrough in making HIV treatment available to people with drug problems. Before that treatment access was denied, since drug users were seen as useless members of society undeserving of antiretrovirals. It was an official reasoning. His fierce struggle and joyful activism lives on through our work.
We are working for the community from which we come. We lost too many friends and peers to AIDS, tuberculosis, overdose and now COVID and we keep loosing. Despite tremendous progress in drug policy in the world, Russia's is still stuck in the murderous drug war regime.
We are all hurt by the health system failure but more so by the political repressions, by police brutality and impunity. Some of us don't use illegal drugs any more, but even distributing information and scientific data has become a crime.
We believe that the war on drugs is a horrible historical mistake, a product of a racist, patriarchal, hierarchical and militarised society. It hurts the society, ruins communities all over the globe and serves the rich and corrupt. Drug users are the most disempowered group who are least able to fight back against abuses and injustice.
We work tirelessly, we stand long evenings in the freezing winter cold empowering our peers. These are our lives, our rights and our freedoms. If the community is attacked and oppressed we should communicate: together we should be able to find a solution and turn the game.
We have been working on this for quite a long time now. We have super committed team of outreach workers, paralegals, case managers, medical specialists, community activists, lawyers. We managed to build societal support to our work and a network of top quality journalists who understand drug policy so we feel more protected against political adversities. We try to find the perfect balance between continuing to provide our services but also not being shut up, unable to talk about drug decriminalization, freedom of information, rights violations publicly and sustain an important public conversations on the consequences of the war on drugs. We have the trust of the community and of the political and social activists in Russia from domains other than public health. We discussed and figured out how to continue services in case of more lethal attacks on the organisation and we are ready and inspired to continue and expand our services and activism in any political conditions.
Our whole story is a tale of resistance and resilience. Since 2012 our site has repeatedly been blocked by the Federal Drug control service, Ministry of Internal Affairs, Roskomnadzor, the internet censor board. In 2016 we were branded “Foreign agents”. In 2018 we were blown by a huge 12k USD fine for ‘narco-propaganda’ (we published an article on reducing health and legal risks of methedrone). A huge fine for a small organisation could have closed us for good – “suffocating”, as Amnesty International described it – but we managed to crowdfund this fine demonstrating a larger calibre of support for our cause. A little silver lining that came out of this episode was it raised our profile in both local and international media such as Meduza, Vice.
Recently we survived another unexpected attack - a Kremlin-supported news agency published two large smear articles and a Duma deputy accused us of 'drug propaganda'. The attack followed our press statements on the miserable situation of people who use drugs and the absence of any help during COVID.
While many other NGOs have been closed due to Foreign agents and increasing fines, we keep expanding services and seeking ways around the government pressure.
One of our pioneering strategies is strategic litigation, where we fight abuses of human rights through the courts. On many occasions we’ve successfully taken our clients’ cases to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) to change the law or unfair legal practices in Russia. To give you a recent example: in 2013 one of our clients, Yelena I., was arrested after selling less than half-a-gram of heroin to an undercover informer. For this she was not only sentenced to prison, but deprived of custody of her 3 children on the grounds that she was a “drug addict” and therefore, a bad mother (she was not). The children were taken away even though there was no evidence she abused or neglected them, other than leaving them alone for those few hours she spent in police custody. We fought the case for several years until finally earlier this year the ECHR awarded Yelena 20,000 euros on the grounds this was wildly disproportionate, which we hope will not only restore her parental rights but also set a precedent for those thousands of other families which have been torn apart by the legal system.
Details of the case here: https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/rus#{%22itemid%22:[%22001-201326%22]}
- Nonprofit
