Note:
This is my 12th 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
Circassians
in Jordan Call for Boycott of Sochi Games.
The Circassian community of Jordan says in an open letter to the US
president that “holding the Sochi Winter Olympic Games 2014 over occupied
Circassian territory by Russia is a violation of the international Olympic
Charter” and that the games should be moved or boycotted (jaccf.org/?p=1398).
Circassians
in North Caucasus Call on Moscow to Recognize Genocide.
Although they say that the Sochi Games must not be politicized, the leaders of
several Circassian organizations in the North Caucasus say that Moscow must
recognize that a genocide was committed against their people in 1864 and that Moscow
must follow international practice and include materials about the Circassians
and other North Caucasians in its presentation about the Games (aheku.org/page-id-3542.html).
Tatar Leader in US Calls for US Boycott of Kazan Universiade. Vil Mirzayanov, the émigré Tatar leader in the US who teaches at Princeton, has called on the United States to boycott the Universiade in Kazan, an athletic competition in Tatarstan that has presented itself as the prelude to the Sochi Games (svpressa.ru/society/article/67379/).
Estonian Political Figures Urge Boycott of Sochi Games. A group of Estonian political figures, including former prime minister Mart Laar, call for Georgia and other countries to boycott the Olympic competition in Sochi to protest Russian actions in the North Caucasus both now and in the past (youtube.com/watch?v=-F4iy9HH4so).
Georgian Athletes Will Compete at Sochi. Despite the objections of President Mikhail Saakashvili and some other Georgians, the Georgian Olympic Commttee unanimously approves Georgian participation in the games (rsport.ru/olympic_games/20130502/660069155.html).
Tbilisi Official Says Turkey Wants to Ship Cargo for Sochi Through Georgia. Zurab Abashidze, the Georgian prime minister’s special representative for relations with Russia, says that Turkey is interested in shipping cargo for the Sochi games via Georgia, an arrangement that “can bring solid revenues to the Georgian budget” (en.trend.az/regions/scaucasus/georgia/2145338.html).
Russian Police ‘Forcibly Disperse’ Protest at Sochi Olympic Site. Human Rights Watch reports that Russian security agencies and private firms “forcibly dispersed a group of residents protesting construction at a proposed power site” in Sochi. Several of the protesters were injured as a result (hrw.org/news/2013/04/30/russia-security-forces-shut-down-protest-sochi-olympic-site and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/223534/).
Notorious
‘Fan Passport’ Apparently Not Dead. Although Russian officials earlier said
they were dropping plans to require that people attending the Sochi Games
provide special information in order to get a “fan passport” as part of
security arrangements for the game, a Moscow news agency reports that the idea
is very much alive and that those who want to be spectators at Sochi will have
to apply for and get one of these in addition to purchasing tickets (nr2.ru/sports/437080.html).
Sochi Officials Press Ahead with Demolition of More
Buildings.
Asserting that several hundred buildings in the city have been put up
without permission, Sochi officials are moving to tear them down at the expense
of those who erected them, something some people in Sochi believe is being done
selectively in a way that opens the door to more corruption (blogsochi.ru/content/kogda-zdes-byl-plyazh-%C2%ABsolnechnyi%C2%BB).
Work
on Olympic Sites Accelerates, Officials Ask Residents for ‘Understanding.’ Despite regular claims that everything is
under control, contractors who are building Olympic venues and support
facilities have increased their work tempos and have asked residents for “understanding”
about the dislocations this is causing (blogsochi.ru/content/stroitelstvo-novoi-naberezhnoi-v-imeretinskoi-nizmennosti).
New
Mass Graves Reported in Sochi.
Many Circassians fear that Olympic construction will disturb mass graves
of their ancestors, but some Sochi residents report finding a new mass grave,
this one including the bodies of Central Asian gastarbeiters who had been
working on Olympic construction sites. Journalists are currently investigating
these reports (presidentinternet.net/---263.html#.UYEFDzXquQQ.facebook).
Even
Nature Appears to Be Against Sochi Games, Observers Say. In addition to
the problems associated with holding the first winter games in a subtropical
zone, Sochi faces the likelihood of earthquakes and flooding, experts say (nr2.ru/ekb/rabkrin/437140.html). Indeed, the city’s mayor is already making plans
to evacuate Sochi residents in the event of the latter (rosbalt.ru/video/2013/04/30/1124149.html).
Obama, Putin Discuss Security at Sochi. The White House announces that US President Barack Obama called his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to “discuss security measures for the Sochi Olympics in light” of the Boston bombing” and “cooperation on counterterrorism and security issues going forward, including with respect to the 2014 Olympics in Sochi” (whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/04/29/readout-president-obama-s-call-president-putin).
Russia Firms to Combat Counterfeit Olympic Goods. Faced with the likelihood that Sochi may be flooded by goods that violate licensing arrangements for Olympic goods, a group of Russian firms has reached agreement on opposing the appearance and sale of any such products at Sochi (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/16689-krupnejshie-ritejlery-strany-obedinilis-protiv-olimpijskogo-kontrafakta).
Journalists
Criticized for Linking All Events in North Caucasus to Sochi. A commentary on the Kavkazoved.info site says
that journalists reporting on preparations for the Sochi Games have sparked “alarmism”
among the public by linking everything that is happening in the North Caucasus
to the Games just as some did in the case of China in August 2008 (kavkazoved.info/news/2013/04/30/sochi-2014-predolimpijskie-ozhidania-regionalnoj-destabilizacii.html).
More
Doubts Expressed about North Caucasus Resort Plans. Even if they
are ever built, local people say, the resorts planned for the North Caucasus
are unlikely to be filled with visitors most of the time and instead will be
expensive “parasites” on the local economy (blogsochi.ru/content/v-adlerskom-raione-snosyat-odin-iz-krupneishikh-samostroev-na-kurorte).
Sochi
Shows that Slowing of Russian Economy Result of Internal, Not External Causes. A Moscow
commentator says that Sochi demonstrates that the current problems in the
Russian economy have domestic rather than foreign sources and that Moscow officials
are beginning to recognize that reality (expert.ru/expert/2013/18/uskorenie-kak-inzhenernaya-zadacha/).
Was
Bilalov Poisoned?
Akhmed Bilalov, the former deputy head of the Russian Olympic Committee and
former head of the North Caucasus
Resorts project, says that he was poisoned, pointing to the discovery of
higiher than normal levels of mercury in his body. He is currently being treated at a German
hospital (sbs.com.au/news/article/1761114/Sacked-Olympic-official-claims-poisoning, lenta.ru/news/2013/04/27/mercury/,
echo.msk.ru/news/1062522-echo.html,
en.ria.ru/sports/20130427/180881915.html,
and guardian.co.uk/world/2013/apr/28/axed-russian-winter-olympics-official-poisoned?CMP=twt_gu).
Raw
Sewage Being Dumped Directly into Black Sea.
Beaches in Sochi are now at risk because raw sewage is being dumped
directly into the Black Sea, as a new video shows (blogsochi.ru/content/na-plyazhe-albatros-kanalizatsiya-bezhit-pryamikom-v-more).
IOC
Head Says Security ‘Among the Most Important Priorities.’ Saying that
preparations for the Sochi games are “proceeding smoothly, International
Olympic Committee President acques Rogge says that ever since the 1972 Munich
games, “security is listed among the most important priorities of the IOC” (indrus.in/news/2013/04/28/ioc_president_applauds_sochi_effort_ahead_of_olympic_games_24281.html).
Sochi
Traffic Jams ‘Worse than Moscow’s,’ Visitor Says. The traffic jams in Sochi are “worse than in
Moscow” because the streets there are so narrow and so many of them are blocked
for construction forcing drivers to make detour after detour, a Moscow
journalist visiting the city says (nr2.ru/authors/436725.html).
Ingush
Athletes Refuse to Stand for Russian National Anthem. In a move that could presage problems at
Sochi, athletes from Ingushetia refused to stand for the playing of the Russian
national anthem at a competition in the North Caucasus Federal District, an
event that attracted coverage in the Russian media and sharp criticism from
local officials (nazaccent.ru/content/7652-glava-respubliki-otchital-ingushskih-sportsmenov-za.html
and rosbalt.ru/video/2013/04/26/1123198.html).
Russian
Officials Announce Price Controls for Sochi Games. In order to prevent price gouging, Russia’s
Federal Anti-Monopoly Service says it will announce later this month “a list of
goods and services, the pricesfor which will be regulated” during the Sochi
Olympics (rus.ruvr.ru/2013_04_28/Sochi-2014-FAS-pristrunit-spekuljantov/).
Were Questions to Putin about Sochi Blocked? A
North Caucasus commentator suggests that the reason Russian President Vladimir
Putin did not receive any questions about Sochi during his television meeting
with the Russian people is that organizers of that event blocked such questions
from being passed on to the Kremlin leader (www.bigcaucasus.com/events/topday/26-04-2013/83149-Caucasus_in_Russia-0/).
Moscow
Still Hasn’t Brought Sochi Geography Group to Heel. The Russian Geography Soicety has not been
able to “liquidate” its wayward branch in Sochi, Moscow news outlets report,
despite the fact that Sochi geographers have protested Olympic construction and
the fact that Vladimir Putin is the head of the all-Russian group (sobkorr.ru/news/517A763FEDA66.html).
Ingush
Leader Says Chechen Head Should Be Focused on Olympic Security. Instead of engaging in provocations,
Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, the leader of Ingushetia, says, Ramzan Kadyrov, the head of
Chechnya, should be working to “guarantee the security of the Olympiad” at
Sochi (www.echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/1062348-echo/).
Homeless
Animals Said Still at Risk in Sochi. Despite official
promises not to engage in a mass slaughter of homeless dogs and cats in advance
of the Sochi Olympics, activist there say that officials are still seeking to
get rid of the animals and also seeking to blame the activists for any
shortcomings in that effort (blogsochi.ru/content/piket-zoozashchitnikov
and blogsochi.ru/content/gospodin-khoroshii-mochi-2014).
Sochi
Volunteers Being Trained Across Russia.
For what organizers say is the first time in the history of the
Olympics, volunteers who will work at Sochi are being trained “not only on the
territory of the organizer city but throughout the entire country,” in some 17
cities (tataram.ru/article/4333/9/).
Putin
Says He Hopes Sochi Games Will Make Nation ‘Healthier.’ Russian President Vladimir Putin says that he
hopes the Olympics will get more Russians interested in sports and thus make
the nation “healthier” (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/16610-putin-nadeetsja-chto-olimpiada-ozdorovit-naciju).
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