Note: This is my 17th 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
London
Paper Calls Sochi Olympiad ‘Putin’s Calamity Games.’ The
Daily Mail says that “collapsing buildings, colossal corruption, [and] contract
killings” are only the most obvious aspects of what is shaping up to be a
disaster. The 740-word illustrated
article, published as Russian President Vladimir Putin came to London to meet
British Prime Minister David Cameron has been widely reprinted or summarized by
Russian media outlets (www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2342153/Putins-30bn-calamity-games-Collapsing-buildings-Colossal-corruption-Contract-killings-The-race-complete-Russias-Winter-Olympic-village-mired-scandal.html?ito=feeds-newsxml,
vestnikkavkaza.net/world-press-review/sport/41639.html
and www.nr2.ru/moskow/444659).
US Sports Columnist
Says Sochi has Become ‘Putin’s Mafia Olympics.’ Writing on a
blog for The Nation, Dave Zirin says that preparations for the Sochi Games show
that Russian Prsident Putin “not unlike the decaying Mafia itself – isn’t
nearly as ruthlessly efficient as his legend suggests.” Despite staking his
reputation on a successful games, “he’s being exposed as little more than a
thuggish front man for a kleptocracythenation.com/blog/174821/ring-and-rings-vladamir-putins-mafia-olympics#axzz2WSlREJL8).
Russian LGBT
Group in New York Calls for Sochi Boycott … Nina Long, co-president of an émigré Russsian gay group in New
York, says that “LGBT people in Russia are sacred, they live in fer, and we
want people to be aware of the issue. If they feel strongly about human righs,
they should boycott the Olympicsin Sochi.” Her comments come after the group
issued a boycott appeal (passportmagazine.com/blog/archives/29426-athletes-may-boycott-sochi-2014-olympics-over-russias-anti-gay-stance.html
and en.ria.ru/world/20130618/181721132/Russian-Gays-in-US-Call-for-Boycott-of-Sochi-Games.html).
See also the letter of HRW’s LGBT Rights Program on the issues the games raise
at hrw.org/node/116598.
… But IOC Says
LGBT Competitors Will Be Welcome at Sochi.
Despite increasing homophobia in the Russian Federation, he
International Olympic Committee says that it is still ready to host gay
competitors at the Sochi Games. But gay
activists are not sure. As one put it, “while the rest of the West is going
forward on gay issues, Russia is heading in the opposite direction. With the
Games less than a year away, there's no way the IOC will want to rock the boat
too much. Going forward, however, the IOC must consider a bidding country's
record on LGBT issues before awarding an Olympics. No country with Russia's
laws should ever get the privilege of hosting again” (outsports.com/2013/6/16/4436808/ioc-gay-winter-olympics-welcome-despite-russia-homophobia).
US, Russian
Security Cooperation Highlights Threat at Sochi. An agreement between US President Barack Obama
and Russian President Vladimir Putin to “join forces” to provide security at
the Sochi Games has the unintended effect of calling attention to just how many
security risks there are likely to be at a competition held on the edge of the
troubled North Caucasus (insidethegames.biz/olympics/winter-olympics/2014/1014703-russia-and-us-join-forces-for-sochi-2014-security and policymic.com/articles/49079/sochi-2014-can-putin-s-crackdown-keep-the-winter-olympics-safe).
Weak Transportation
Network Makes Security at Sochi a Real Problem. Although Moscow plans a massive network of
security arrangements during the Sochi Olympiad, it may not be able to react
quickly to any terrorist challenges because the streets there will not allow
its forces pursue anyone seeking to disrupt the games or come to the assistance of
those who might suffer from a terrorist attack (.news.com.au/sport/more-sport/olympics-facing-boston-style-attacks-unprecedented-security-at-sochi-2014-winter-olympics/story-fndukor0-1226663740932).
Karachay-Cherkess
Lawmakers Want to Make Denial of Circassian Genocide a Crime. Members of the
Popular Assembly of the Karachay-Cherkess Republic have passed a resolution
calling on the Russian Duma to pass legislation imposing criminal penalties on
anyone who denies that tsarist officials committed a genocide against the
Circassians in 1864. The Russian legislators are unlikely to take up the
matter, but this is one more way in which the Circassian cause is attracting
more attention precisely because of the decision to hold the Olympics in Sochi
(news.ya09.ru/news/718141). Two
new articles provide details on precisely what happened to the Circassians 150
years ago at Sochi (krasnaya-polyana-genocide1864.com/2013/06/krasnaya-polyana-breaking-the-150-years-of-silence-part-two/#more-155).
Kozak
Acknowledges Some Olympic Construction Far Behind Schedule. While insisting that Sochi will be ready for
the games, Dmitry Kozak, Russia’s vice premier who is overseeing preparations,
says that some hotels are far from ready and that he will seek to punish
contractors building them unless they bring their projects back on schedule. He
also said that a power plant slated to be built in Kudeptsa that local residents
had opposed would in fact not be built (vedomosti.ru/politics/news/13141081/kozak_raskritikoval_podryadchikov_sryvayuschih_sroki
and blogsochi.ru/content/dmitrii-kozak-kudeptinskaya-tes-v-sochi-stroitsya-ne-budet
).
Al
Jazeera Program Focuses on Circassian Objections to Holding Olympics in Sochi. Al Jazeera World television broadcasts a
44-minute film on why Circassians oppose holding the Olympicson the site where
their ancestors were expelled or even killed by Russian forces 150 years
ago. To view the program, see www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9JJAlVQG9c.
Oligarch Wants
Moscow to Ensure He Makes a Profit in Sochi.
Oleg Deripaska, a Russian oligarch who says his firm has spent 1.4
billion US dollars for Olympic contruction is calling on the Russian government
to ensure he makes a profit. “Such a
large-scale project as the Olympics should serve as an example for the
development of private-public investment projects,” he says (en.rsport.ru/olympics/20130619/669035320.html and rsport.ru/interview/20130619/668902834.html).
VEB Bank Head
Said Moscow Unlikely to Recoup Sochi Loans. Vladimir Dmitriyev, chairman of
the VEB Bank, said that eight of the 19 projects the bank is currently funding
are unlikely to show a profit and that as a result the bank is unlikely to
recover the loans it has made (washingtonpost.com/sports/olympics/russias-veb-bank-warns-of-billions-in-losses-from-financing-olympics-construction-in-sochi/2013/06/18/29d902a4-d849-11e2-b418-9dfa095e125d_story.html and realty.newsru.com/article/14jun2013/white_eleph).
Another Russian
Olympic Contractor Charged with Fraud.
Sistema, a Russian firm involved in the construction of Olympic sites in
Sochi has been charged with conspiracy and fraud for diverting funds intended
for those projects into the pockets of the company’s senior officers(.nr2.ru/technology/445005.html).
Russian
Officials Refuse to Open Case Against Sochi Police Who Tortured a Worker… Prosecutors in
Sochi have refued to open a case against Sochi police for torturing a contract
worker on an Olympic project after he demanded that the company pay him and his
fellow workers their back wages
(kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/225825/,
blogsochi.ru/content/v-sochi-politseiskie-izbili-stroitelei sochi-24.ru/proishestviya/sochinskie-policejskie-pytali-cheloveka-lomom-v-zadnij-prohod.2013619.64557.html
and www.echo.msk.ru/blog/rodinol/1098910-echo/).
… But Grozny
Presses for Charges Against Those Mistreating Chechen Workers in Sochi. Chechnya’s
ombudsman is pressing for the opening of criminal charges against companies and
officials who have failed to pay or otherwise mistreated Chechens working on
Olympic construction sites, demands that put Moscow, the chief patron of
Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov in a potentially difficult situation (www.chechenombudsman.ru/index.php).
Foreign Visitors
Shocked by Shortcomings in Olympic Construction. As the Games
approach, Russian officials are organizing visits to Sochi for foreign
journalists and others, but instead of being impressed, many of them say and
write that they were horrified by what they have seen (blogsochi.ru/content/chto-dumayut-inostrantsy-o-podgotovke-k-olimpiade-i-kak-otnosyatsya-k-rossii).
Russian
TV Follows Official Script on Sochi Projects. Sochi residents say that they
might be more impressed by the claims of Russian television reporters about
their city it if were not the case that the reporters are speaking from texts
that appear to be lightly re-written official declarations rather than what
anyone can see with the unaided eye (blogsochi.ru/content/sochinskoe-tv-naidite-10-otlichii).
Perm Museum Director Fired over Anti-Sochi
Posters.
Russian officials dismissed Marat Guelman as director of the Museum of
Contemporary Art in Perm after he staged an exhibit featuring posters
satirizing the Sochi Games, including one showing a picture of Stalin wearing
an Olympic mascot costume and another portraying the Olympic rings as hangman’s
nooses (http://en.ria.ru/russia/20130620/181773278/Russian-Art-Curator-Fired-Over-Satirical-Olympics-Exhibits.html).
Expert Says
Projects to Protect Sochi Coastline Dangerous and Illegal. Professor Vyacheslav Maltsev, a specialist on
programs to protect coastal areas, says that the plans Olympic officials have
come up with to protect the Imeretia lowlands are a threat to that area and
violate Russian law on environmental protection (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/225824/).
Circassians
Finally Get Pre-Olympic Exhibit in Adygeya – About Events 5000 Years Ago. Circassian
activists have long sought an exhibit that would speak honestly about what
happened to them when Russian forces occupied their homeland and expelled their
ancestors in the 19th century.
The National Museum of Adygeya, citing the upcoming Olympics, has
responded with an ethnographic exhibition of ites dating more than 5,000 years
ago (natpress.net/index.php?newsid=10478).
Kuban
Governor Nixes New Road to Sochi, Woould Cost 30 Billion US Dollars. Saying that a new road from Dzhubga toSochi
would cost at least 30 billion US dollars, Kuban governor Aleksandr Tkachev
said that there isn’t time to complete it before the Olympics. Indeed, he said,
it might take “decades” to build all the tunnels and bridges such a highway
would require. But without such a
highway, those driving to Sochi will face many problems on the existing and low
quality secondary roads (news.mail.ru/inregions/south/23/economics/13565497/?frommail=1).
Drug Trafficking
an Ever More Serious Problem in Sochi. Officials have convened a conference
of experts to map out a response to drug trafficking in the Olympic city, a
problem that some say has reached epidemic proportions with dealers openly
selling various drugs on the streets of Sochi (blogsochi.ru/content/vyezdnoe-zasedanie-kraevoi-antinarkoticheskoi-komissii-proidet-v-sochi).
Central Street
in Olympic Venue Sea of Mud When It Rains and Dust When It Doesn’t. A video shows that as a result of construction,
the main street in Krasnaya Polyana is little more than a sea of mud whenever
strong rains hit the area and a dusty path when they don’t (blogsochi.ru/content/tsentralnaya-ulitsa-krasnoi-polyany). Meanwhile, Sochi residents say that the sidewalks
in their city are not safe for anyone to use (http://blogsochi.ru/content/ostorozhnei-peshekhod).
Adler
Hoteliers Plan to Charge 1,000 US Dollars a Night for Rooms During Olympics. A
survey of hotel operators in Adler found that local businessmen plan to charge
500 to 1,000 US dollars a night for second-tier hotels during the Olympics, far
more than luxury hotels cost at present and yet another indication that
visitors to the games will face serious price gouging (blogsochi.ru/content/kak-podnyat-uznavaemost-brenda-raskryvaem-sekrety-adlerskikh-biznesmenov).
Adler-Krasnaya
Polyana Road May Be Even More Expensive than Reported Earlier. Reports that Russian officials had spent
three times as much on the 48 kilometer road from Adler to Krasnaya Polyana as
the US did to send an exploring device to Mars may understate the amount
involved, according to a report prepared by the Russian Peoples Freedom
Party. If its figures are correct,
Moscow has spent almost four times as much (blogsochi.ru/content/doklad-o-stroitelstve-dorogi-%C2%ABadler-%E2%80%93-krasnaya-polyana%C2%BB);
Orders to Pull
Down Illegal Construction in Sochi Being Ignored. City officials have called for pulling down
356 buildings, including garages, that were put up without permits or
inspections, but so far, observers say, only 42 have been demolished, leaving unclear
just when or if the others may in fact be removed before the Olympiad (blogsochi.ru/content/kak-uskorit-protsess-snosa-samovolok-obsuzhdali-segodnya-v-sochi).
At least some of the buildings not yet demolished are large and dangerous to
their residents and passers by (blogsochi.ru/content/bytkhinskii-stroitelnyi-bespredel-2
and blogsochi.ru/content/sochi-navodnen-opasnymi-domami).
Sochi Organizers
Sue Sportloto. Sochi 2014 organizers have brought suit
against Russia’s Sportsloto for using the Olympic symbols without permission.
They seek 20 million rubles 600,000 US dollars (http://vz.ru/news/2013/6/18/637715.html).
World Wild Life
Fund says Sochi River One of Ten Russian Sites at Greatest Risk. Experts of the WWF liste the Mzymta River
near Sochi as one of the ten Russian nature sites now at greatest risk from
pollution, in its case from oil spills and phenol (newsbabr.com/?IDE=115914).
Sochi May Not
Have Enough Electric Power. Russian
officials have not taken enough steps to ensure that the the power shortages,
brown outs and black outs that have plagued the Sochi area over recent months
will not get worse and affect the games themselves, according to one journalist
(news-ru.blogspot.com/2013/06/2014.html).
Court Refuses to
End Journalist’s House Arrest in Sochi. The Krasnodar kray court has refused
to end the house arrest of Nikolay Yarst, a journalist who officials say was in
possession of illegal drugs but who his defenders insist is being persecuted
for his honest discussion of problems at Olympic construction projects (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/225723/).
Saakashvili
Doesn’t Want Georgian Flag at Sochi. Even though the Georgian Olympic
Committee has now voted to take part in the Sochi Olympiad, President Mikhail
Saakashvili says that he is “categoricalliy against” that step and insists that
the flag of the Republic of Georgia not appear at that competition (kavpolit.com/saakashvili-xochet-ostavit-olimpijcev-gruzii-bez-flaga/).
Activist Who Reported
Environmental Depradation in North Caucasus Gets Asylum in Estonia. Suren
Gazaryan, a member of the Environmental Watch on the North Caucasus who reported
on the ways in which Sochi organizers are despoiling the environment there, has
been given political asylum by Estonia and continues to speak out about the
situation around Sochi (rferl.org/content/russia-activist--gazaryan-gazarian-estonia-asylum/25015788.html).
More Sochi
Officials Depart as Speculation Grows Mayor Will Be Ousted after Games. Ever more
complaints against Sochi officials about what is happening in that city are
appearing in the press, apparently prompting the departure of several more
senior officials last week and the lodging of criminal charges against them.
But more intriguingly, some Sochi residents are speculating that Mayor Anatoly
Pakhomov will also lose his job immediately after the completion of the
Olympiad (blogsochi.ru/content/gorod-obkhod, blogsochi.ru/content/zamestitel-glavy-goroda-aleksandr-karandin-podal-v-otstavku, and blogsochi.ru/content/novym-merom-sochi-stanet-mikhail-prokhorov).
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