<p>The Kremlin on Friday said Russia will skip the annual global Earth Hour event this weekend after the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) was labelled a "foreign agent" by Moscow.</p>.<p>The move comes as Russia cracks down on most foreign-linked groups since its offensive in Ukraine, including climate-orientated organisations.</p>.<p>Earth Hour, which WWF organises, encourages people worldwide to turn their lights off for 60 minutes to raise awareness about environmental issues.</p>.<p>Russia has taken part in the event, which is scheduled this Saturday, for 14 years.</p>.<p>"This year, we took the decision to hold back from this event," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters Friday.</p>.<p>"It is because they have become a foreign agent."</p>.<p>The Russian justice ministry included the WWF's Russia branch on its list of foreign agents earlier this month.</p>.<p>The global environmental advocacy group has worked in Russia since 1994. The foreign agent label has Soviet-era connotations and has been widely used against Kremlin critics.</p>.<p>Before the Kremlin's announcement, WWF in Russia said on its website that Earth Hour will only take place online this year because of its new status.</p>.<p>The organisation said it will legally challenge the foreign agent decision.</p>.<p>But it also urged caution asking supporters not to use the WWF symbol "as we are worried about our partners and colleagues."</p>.<p>More than 60 environmental groups have signed a petition to President Vladimir Putin this month, calling on him to reverse the WWF foreign agent designation.</p>.<p>They said the organisation is "apolitical" and has "successfully" worked on its mission to protect the Russian environment since the 1990s.</p>.<p>"We are convinced that this decision will have a negative impact on the preservation of the unique nature of our country and believe it should be reversed," they added.</p>.<p>Putin was for much of his long presidency a climate-change sceptic but in recent years has made a U-turn on the issues, calling on Russia to adapt to a changing climate.</p>.<p>Russia has been badly affected by climate change, with permafrost in its northern regions warming and Siberia's forests hit by massive fires every summer.</p>
<p>The Kremlin on Friday said Russia will skip the annual global Earth Hour event this weekend after the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) was labelled a "foreign agent" by Moscow.</p>.<p>The move comes as Russia cracks down on most foreign-linked groups since its offensive in Ukraine, including climate-orientated organisations.</p>.<p>Earth Hour, which WWF organises, encourages people worldwide to turn their lights off for 60 minutes to raise awareness about environmental issues.</p>.<p>Russia has taken part in the event, which is scheduled this Saturday, for 14 years.</p>.<p>"This year, we took the decision to hold back from this event," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters Friday.</p>.<p>"It is because they have become a foreign agent."</p>.<p>The Russian justice ministry included the WWF's Russia branch on its list of foreign agents earlier this month.</p>.<p>The global environmental advocacy group has worked in Russia since 1994. The foreign agent label has Soviet-era connotations and has been widely used against Kremlin critics.</p>.<p>Before the Kremlin's announcement, WWF in Russia said on its website that Earth Hour will only take place online this year because of its new status.</p>.<p>The organisation said it will legally challenge the foreign agent decision.</p>.<p>But it also urged caution asking supporters not to use the WWF symbol "as we are worried about our partners and colleagues."</p>.<p>More than 60 environmental groups have signed a petition to President Vladimir Putin this month, calling on him to reverse the WWF foreign agent designation.</p>.<p>They said the organisation is "apolitical" and has "successfully" worked on its mission to protect the Russian environment since the 1990s.</p>.<p>"We are convinced that this decision will have a negative impact on the preservation of the unique nature of our country and believe it should be reversed," they added.</p>.<p>Putin was for much of his long presidency a climate-change sceptic but in recent years has made a U-turn on the issues, calling on Russia to adapt to a changing climate.</p>.<p>Russia has been badly affected by climate change, with permafrost in its northern regions warming and Siberia's forests hit by massive fires every summer.</p>