By Paul Sonne 

MOSCOW--Russia's parliament passed a bill to restrict foreign ownership of Russian media companies to 20%, a move that stands to force U.S. and European companies to relinquish control over newspapers, magazines and television networks, further restricting Russia's media landscape.

Russia's lower house of parliament, known as the Duma, passed the bill 430-2 on Friday. It is all but certain to win approval from the upper house and the Kremlin in the coming weeks, thus becoming law.

The new rules would extend the government's control over a media sector that already counts few voices of dissent. Since Vladimir Putin came to power nearly 15 years ago, the state has consolidated control over the television sector in partnership with tycoons friendly to the Kremlin, clamping down on the main source of news for most Russians.

The new law is likely to further extend that influence by shifting control of the remaining, foreign-owned print outlets that have weathered Russia's media crackdown to domestic owners, who presumably would be more susceptible to Kremlin pressure.

"We perfectly understand that those who control the information control the world," Vadim Dengin, a Duma deputy from the nationalist LDPR party, said upon presenting the bill this past week. He warned that some foreign-owned Russian publications, which he did not name, already amounted to a "Fifth Column" in Russia, supporting the views of the West.

Since the crisis erupted in Ukraine, the Russian government has become increasingly paranoid about what it views as destabilizing foreign influence. Russian lawmakers accused the U.S. and Europe of fomenting a coup in Kiev early this year and have repeatedly condemned those who criticize the Kremlin's actions in Ukraine as traitors and foreign agents.

Of late, foreign-owned publications such as the Russian versions of Forbes and GQ, as well as the business newspaper Vedomosti, have been some of the last remaining mainstream outlets willing to devote space to the views of Kremlin critics.

Germany's Axel Springer SE owns the Russian edition of Forbes. Advance Publications Inc.'s Condé Nast owns the Russian versions of GQ, as well as Vogue, Glamour and Tatler.

Both companies declined to comment on the bill Friday.

The Wall Street Journal joined forces with The Financial Times and a local partner to launch the Russian financial newspaper Vedomosti in 1999. It has since become one of Russia's most influential news outlets.

It is owned jointly by News Corp's Dow Jones & Co., publisher of the Journal; Pearson PLC's FT Group, publisher of The Financial Times; and Sanoma Independent Media, a unit of Finland's Sanoma OYJ. Though the paper's main fare is business coverage, it has recently published opinion articles by well-known economist Sergei Guriev, who fled the country last year amid scrutiny by Russian investigators, and an interview with anticorruption blogger Alexei Navalny, a Kremlin critic who has found himself under house arrest for months.

"What are you afraid of? Vedomosti?" Dmitry Gudkov, one of the two Duma deputies to vote against the law Friday, asked the parliament during deliberations this week. "But you yourselves read this newspaper."

Mr. Gudkov suggested the bill was a crippling blow to Russia's media business and a last gasp for independent news. "You already control all the main television channels. You already control practically all of the main newspapers," he said to his fellow Russian lawmakers. "Could you at least just leave yourself the possibility of accessing normal, objective information?"

Dow Jones, the Financial Times and Sanoma declined to comment.

The bill will prevent foreign investors from buying more than 20% of Russian media outlets starting Jan. 1, 2016. Foreign companies that already own stakes have until February 1, 2017 to divest. Foreign-owned media outlets must present documentation to the state communications regulator on the identity of their new domestic owners by Feb. 15, 2017.

The legislation stands to affect a number of entertainment publications and television channels that have little to do with politics.

For example, The Walt Disney Co. owns 49% of the Disney Channel in Russia as part of a joint venture the Russian television and radio company UTH Holding. Sweden's Modern Times Group MTG AB owns a nearly 40% stake in CTC Media Inc., a popular group of entertainment channels. Germany's Hubert Burda Media owns the Russian edition of Playboy, the girls' magazine Oops! and an array of Russian food, automobile and interior-decorating magazines that would fall under the law.

A Disney spokeswoman didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for MTG said the Swedish firm was following the law's progress and analyzing what potential action could be taken. A spokesman for Hubert Burda declined to comment.

The U.S. traditionally limited foreign companies from owning more than 25% of American television and radio stations. But the Federal Communications Commission voted unanimously last November to allow exemptions to the rule, opening up the market to foreign owners. ((http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303289904579197954214094872))

Domestically-owned Russian news outlets that have published articles unfavorable to the Kremlin have increasingly come under pressure in recent years. Both Gazeta.ru and Lenta.ru, two Russian-owned online news outlets that often took an independent line, found their editorial management replaced with Kremlin loyalists after they published critical content.

TV Dozhd, the only Russian television channel to regularly invite opposition-minded guests on air, came under pressure last year after it ran an online poll about the siege of Leningrad during World War II that many Russian lawmakers deemed offensive and unpatriotic. Cable operators and advertisers quickly dropped the station, putting it on the brink of collapse.

On Friday, some Russian media executives voiced criticism of the legislation passed in the Duma. Pavel Gusev, the editor of the Russian tabloid Moskovsky Komsomolets and chairman of the Moscow Journalists Union, said the bill had been passed in record time without any proper consultation with media owners or members of the public.

"I consider this an unacceptable violation," Mr. Gusev said, according to the Interfax news agency. "Because laws of social significance--and media outlets are social institutions--have to be discussed with the public."

Write to Paul Sonne at paul.sonne@wsj.com

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