Note:
This is my ninth special Window on
Eurasia about the meaning and impact of the planned Olympiad on the nations in
the surrounding region. These WOEs, which
will appear each Friday over the coming year, will not aim at being
comprehensive but rather will consist of a series bullet points about such
developments. I would like to invite
anyone with special knowledge or information about this subject to send me
references to the materials involved. My
email address is paul.goble@gmail.com Allow
me to express my thanks to all those who already have. Paul Goble
Unlike
China Before Beijing Games, Russia is Becoming More Repressive. Many had expected Moscow to moderate its
repressive course if it received an Olympic bid, an American journalist writes,
but the Russian government has cracked down further. Nonetheless, Joshua Foust
suggests, “an Olympic boycott movement which would affect Russia’s much-beloved
national pride might actually spur some reconsideration. Absent that movement,
it’s likely Russia’s behavior will continue unmodified” (undispatch.com/why-arent-the-sochi-olympics-moderating-russias-human-rights-crackdown).
Circassian
Organizations in North Caucasus Demand Inclusion of National Symbols at Sochi. Timur Tenov, a scholar at the
Kabardino-Balkaria State University, says that “a majority of social
organizations” in the Circassian republics “demand the inclusion of Circassian
symbols” at the Olympiad, while a minority are calling for boycotts or other
forms of protest (hekupsa.com/publikatsii/kavkaz/694-olimpiada-2014-vernost-traditsiyam-i-aktivizatsiya-islamskikh-tsentrov).
‘Nezavisimaya
Gazeta’ Article Critical of Sochi Games Pulled from Paper’s Website. An article by
Aleksey Gor bachev sharply critical of the Sochi Olympiad has been pulled from
the website of the newspaper where it originally appeared. But copies of the
article are still circulating on the Internet. For the story, see blogsochi.ru/content/finskii-parlament-boitsya-za-reputatsiyu-svoei-strany-i-nachinaet-proverku-afery-kudepstinsk; for the text
of the article itself, see http://www.yabloko.ru/publikatsii/2013/04/10_1.
Abkhazia Plans
to Highlight Its Stability at Sochi.
Nikolay Trapsha, an Abkhaz historian, says his republic plans to use the
Olympic Games as an occasion to attract attention to itself as an island of
stability and progress in the North Caucasus (hekupsa.com/cherkesiya/obzor/693-abkhazskij-rakurs-olimpijskaya-problematika).
People Seeking to Visit a Beach Near Sochi
Charged with Holding ‘Unsanctioned Meeting.’ A group of visitors who only sought to use
the beach have been charged with trying to organize an “unsanctioned” meeting,
a measure of the level of the nervousness of officials in the region about such
a possibility (bellona.ru/articles_ru/articles_2013/1365669036.06).
Circassian MuftiatesWant
to Open a Mosque in Olympic Village.
Religious leaders from Adygeya, Kabardino-Balkaria and
Karachayevo-Cherkessia are pressing officials for the right to build a mosque
in the Olympic village at Sochi (adygvoice.ru/newsview.php?uid=10754).
Sochi Mayor at
Risk of Being on US Magnitsky List.
Anatoly Pakhomov, the mayor of Sochi, may be among those prevented from
entering the United States by being listed on the Magnitsky List of officials
who have violated human rights, according to Yury Mosha, an émigré Russian
businessman (mediazavod.ru/shorties/133201).
Abkhaz Scholar Says Sochi Games Must Benefit
Circassian Peoples. Soslan Salakaya,
an Abkhaz professor, says that the organizers of the Sochi Games must ensure
that they are conducted in a way that will benefit the Circassian nationalities
(hekupsa.com/cherkesiya/anticherkesizm/620-s-salakaya-politizatsiya-olimpiady-faktor-obostreniya-abkhazo-cherkesskikh-otnoshenij ).
Domestic,
Foreign Groups Pushing Circassian Case on Sochi Games. Aleksandr Krylov, a specialist at Moscow’s
IMEMO, says that the Circassian issue has risen in importance as a result of
the efforts of “certain foreign players and definite forces in the Caucasus” (hekupsa.com/cherkesiya/obzor/621-a-krylov-provedenie-olimpiady-v-sochi-imeet-gluboko-simvolicheskoe-znachenie).
Sochi Being
Sacrificed for Olympics, Visitor Says.
Tatyana Cherkezyan says her visits to Sochi have convinced her that the interests
of the people of Sochi are being sacrificed in order to put on a good show for
the Olympiad just as the interests of the people of Moscow were sacrificed for
the Olympics in 1980 (journal.liberty.su/multimedia/sochi/).
Resort Official
Puts Himself Beyond Reach of Russian Law.
Akhmed Bilalov, the former head of the North Caucasus Resorts program
who has been charged with embezzling millions of rubles, has gone abroad where
for the moment at least he is beyond the reach of Russian courts (expert.ru/2013/04/10/rastratilsya-na-sochi/?n=66995,
kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/222690/ and kavpolit.com/ugolovnoe-delo-vozbuzhdeno-v-otnoshenii-axmeda-bilalova/).
Kremlin Might Free Khodorkovsky to Distract
Attention from Sochi Failures. A Moscow
commentator has suggested tha the Kremlin might decide to free imprisoned
Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky in order to district domestic and
international attention from failings at Sochi (publicpost.ru/blog/id/28454/).
Adyge Khase
Leader Urges Tougher Stance on Sochi.
Murdin Teshev, the honorary chairman of the Adyge Khase public meeting,
says that Moscow has not responded to Circassian demands and that the
Circassians must adopt a tougher stance regarding the upcoming Olympiad (natpress.ru/index.php?newsid=8169).
Circassians Form
Group to Protest Exclusion from Games.
A new movement, called “Right to a Motherland,” has emerged among the
Circassians and is directing its efforts for the inclusion of their co-ethnics
in the Sochi games “which are taking place on an ancient Circassian land” (facebook.com/groups/351047254906986/permalink/585329354812107/).
Sochi
Construction Projects Face Labor Shortage.
Sochi construction projects are being held back by a shortage of skilled
labor in the region, according to Russian specialists (www.kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/222552/).
Fewer Foreign
Networks May Cover Olympiad than Moscow Expects. Three Australian television networks have decided
not to put in bids to cover the Sochi games because the prices they would be
expected to pay are too high (news.com.au/breaking-news/seven-withdraws-from-bidding-for-olympics-as-price-tag-proves-too-great-for-tv-networks/story-e6frfkp9-1226614918163).
Russian
Fans Will Have to Pay More than Foreign Ones to Visit Sochi. Ticket prices for people coming from Europe
or Asia will be far lower than for those visiting from Siberia or even the
Middle Volga, travel agencies say (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/16205-olimpijskaja-arifmetika-iz-londona-v-sochi-dobratsja-deshevle-chem-iz-kazani).
Putin
Should Lead Russian Team at Sochi, Supporters Say. The Russian
National Committee 60+, which was put together to plan for Putin’s 60th
birthday, says that the Russian president should lead the Russian team at Sochi
as a master of sports and notes that he will have the chance to carry the
Olympic torch on his birthday (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/16204-putinu-prochat-post-kapitana-olimpijskoj-sbornoj).
US
Geological Survey to Help Predict Problems at Sochi. Officials of the US Geological Survey will
help provide technical expertise about possible natural disasters that may
occur in advance of or at the Sochi Olympiad (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/16131-amerikancy-v-sochi-lrazygrajutr-stihiju).
Warm Weather May
Threaten Competitions.
Even the warehousing of snow may not be enough if Sochi suffers from anomalous
warm weather next year, officials say, because high temperatures could make it
impossible to keep venues in shape for competition (hekupsa.com/mnenie/blogi/500-olimpiada-2014-ya-idu-po-asfaltu-v-lyzhi-obutyj).
Sochi Olympics ‘Shame’ Russia, Writer Says. Commenting on an
article that suggested that those building the Olympic venues are real
professionals, a reader of “Novaya gazeta” says that corruption and other forms
of official malfeasance about the games are “shameful.” He suggested that the builders
should have been employed to put up housing for ordinary Russians (novayagazeta.ru/sports/57580.html).
Moscow May Put
Off Protesters’ Trials Until After Sochi.
One Russian activist suggests that in order to avoid international
embarrassment, Moscow may delay trials for those charged will illegal
activities in the course of peaceful demonstrations in the Russian capital and
elsewhere until the Olympiad is completed (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=515DB222E1B05).
Sochi’s Duma Deputy Calls for Creation of Special
Economic Zone There.
Sergey Krivonosov, a United Russia representative from Sochi in the Russian
Duma, has called for the establishment of a special economic zone around Sochi,
a step that would benefit the major investors in the Olympiad (blogsochi.ru/content/deputat-gosdumy-sergei-krivonosov-predlozhil-sozdat-oez-v-bolshom-sochi).
It is unclear, however, whether such a zone would do much to stem the decline
of small business there (http://blogsochi.ru/content/kto-v-sochi-sposoben-spasti-malyi-biznes).
Former Ecology
Official in Sochi Sentenced to Prison for Nine Years. Elena Sokolinskaya, the former head of
environmental protection in Sochi, has been sentenced to nine years in prison
for allowing builders to run roughshod over the green spaces of her city (blogsochi.ru/content/chinovniku-administratsii-sochi-dali-9-let-kolonii-obshchego-rezhima).
By Delaying
Issues Until After Sochi, Moscow Will Face Bigger Problems. Dmitry Kovalyev, a Russian commentator, says
that the Kremlin is seeking to put off efforts to resolve problems in the
Caucasus until after the Olympics but that doing so will only make those
problems still worse (lenta.ru/articles/2013/04/09/twotowers).
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