Note: This is my 16th 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
Concerns
about Possible Terrorist Attacks in Sochi Grow. Ever more Russian and international news
outlets have been discussing the risk of terrorist attacks during the Sochi
Olympiad, with many reports suggesting that Moscow may not be in a position to
prevent all of them Moreover,
increasingly foreign reports about such problems are being repeated in the
Russian media (nr2.ru/incidents/443645.html,
washingtonpost.com/world/europe/russia-to-deploy-vast-security-force-to-protect-sochi-olympics-but-looming-threats-remain/2013/06/11/8041a12e-d262-11e2-9577-df9f1c3348f5_story.html, ecurityinfowatch.com/news/10960400/sochi-olympics-to-see-use-of-cutting-edge-security-technology,
cbc.ca/sports/olympics/story/2013/06/11/sp-ioc-sochi-olympics-security.html,thestarphoenix.com/sports/Russia+vows+make+Sochi+safest+Olympics/8512773/story.html,
usnews.com/news/world/articles/2013/06/11/russia-faces-security-challenges-at-sochi-olympics,
nationalsecurityzone.org/site/olympics-bring-security-concerns-to-unstable-caucasus/#.UbLrW_FnDAw.facebook , and echo.msk.ru/news/1093832-echo.html).
Some
Sochi Olympic Package Tours to Cost 20,000 US Dollars a Day. Those who want to watch the Olympics in Sochi
can now purchase packages costing up to
670,000 rubles (20,800 US dollars) a day, excluding he cost of travel to
that North Caucasus city, Moscow newspapers say. This is only one of many
indications that these games are being organized for the wealthiest, something that
is infuriating ever more Russians and raising eyebrows in the West as well (rbth.ru/news/2013/06/10/sochi_olympics_partners_unveil_exclusive_packages_26930.html,
themoscownews.com/russia/20130610/191596979/Hefty-10000-price-tag-for-Sochi-Olympic-tickets.html,
globalpost.com/dispatch/news/afp/130610/olympics-sochi-package-deals-top-15000-euros-report,
blogsochi.ru/content/poezdka-na-olimpiadu-2014-oboidetsya-v-10-000,
blogsochi.ru/content/tseny-na-turpaket-v-sochi-na-vremya-olimpiady-sostavyat-ot-80-do-700-tysyach-rublei
and www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/trip-to-sochi-2014-to-break-bank/481389.html).
Sochi Games ‘a
Curse’ for Daghestani Officials.
The upcoming Olympiad as become “a curse” for officials in Daghestan, “Nezavisimaya
gazeta” says, noting that Moscow has been moving against officials in that
North Caucasus republic for more than six months in the hopes of improving
security conditions there (ng.ru/regions/2013-06-11/5_dagestan.html).
Pre-Sochi
Purge Hits Russian Military… Moscow’s efforts to impose order in the North
Caucasus in advance of the Sochi Games has now claimed a senior military
commander in the region, with the commander of the 58th Russian Army
being charged with illegally using his subordinates as servants (lenta.ru/news/2013/06/10/delo/ and sledcom.ru/news/305695.html).
…
and Muslims in Moscow.
Under orders from President Vladimir Putin to crack down on Islamist groups in
Russia in advance of the Sochi Games, Russian officials rounded up 300 Muslims
in Moscow last week (idesigntimes.com/articles/5954/20130610/300-muslims-detained-moscow-roundup-extreme-putin-islam-islamic-mosque-olympics-sochi-chechnya.htm).
Moscow
Bank Says Most Government Loans to Oligarchs for Sochi Work Won’t Be Repaid. Russia’s
Vnesekonom Bank says that even if Olympic sites are completed on time, the
Russian government is unlikely to get back many of the loans it has made to
oligarchs involved in their construction and that as a result the Russian tax
payer will have to bear the brunt of the costs (gazeta.ru/business/2013/06/13/5379113.shtml).
Moscow
Features Chukchis Not Circassians in Pre-Olympic Cultural Spectacle. “To celebrate the
Sochi 2014 Cultural Olympiad’s Year of the Museum,” Russian officials say, they
are “showcasing the culturreofthe Chukchi, Eskimos,” and other numerically
small peoples of the North but not the Circassians or other peoples of the
North Caucasus, possibly in the hopes that covering some ethnic communities
will lead outsiders to conclude that Moscow is covering all of them (digitaljournal.com/pr/1299741).
Russian
Media Outlets Continue Anti-Circassian Campaign. For another week, Russian outlets in the
North Caucasus and elsewhere have continued their attacks on the Circassians,
blaming that nation for Islamist terrorism and suggesting that its complaints
about the 19th century genocide carried out against them are either
false or overblown (circassiancenter.org/general/6564.html,
hekupsa.com/cherkesiya/anticherkesizm/929-kavkazskaya-vojna-i-cherkesskij-vopros-v-istoricheskoj-pamyati-i-mifakh-istoriografii
,aheku.org/page-id-2293.html, i035.radikal.ru/1101/72/7ae45fe7fdaf.jpg, kavkazoved.info/news/2013/06/11/yavlyaetsja-li-tvorchestvo-literaturnoj-cherkesskoj-diaspory-kulturnym-sostavljajuschim-adygov-rossii.html and hekupsa.com/cherkesiya/diaspora/948-literaturnoe-tvorchestvo-cherkesskoj-diaspory).
Sochi
Journalists Call on Moscow to Drop ‘Fabricated’ Case against Journalist. Nikolay Yarst,
a Russian Public Television journalist, who has been accused of drug possession
apparently in an effort to silence him, faces new legal problems, something that
has prompted journalists in the Olympic city to appeal to Moscow officials to drop
what they call “the fabrication of a criminal case” against their colleague (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/225526/ and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/225495/).
Sochi
Residents Say Olympic Construction Has Left Them ‘Like Animals in a Cage.’ Sochi residents
say that contractors working in Sochi have ignored their property and labor
rights and left them “like animals in a cage.” They add that their complaints
to local, regional, and central Russian officials have been ignored with no one
in the chain of command willing to “offer [them] any help” (kgou.org/post/despite-critics-russia-promises-grand-olympic-spectacle).
Putin
Says He’s Ready for Georgia to Help with Security at Sochi. Russian President Vladimir Putin says that
Moscow is “absolutely ready” for help from Tbilisi on security at the Olympiad
even though the two governments do not have diplomatic relations with each
other. The Russian leader added that “we wantto repair our relationships”
because “we have a very warm attitude to Georgia” and “are very close peoples”
(en.rian.ru/sports/20130611/181618922/Putin-Ready-to-Give-Georgians-Olympic-Security-Role.html).
Shapsugs
Seek Circassian Education in North Caucasus.
The Shapsugs, a subgroup of the Circassian nation whose ancestors lived
where Sochi now is, are pressing their demands for expanding the use of
Circassians in schools in Krasnodar kray and elsewhere (youtube.com/watch?v=1eVsfeOG3w4
).
Circassian
Activists Launch New ‘Krasnaya Polyana Genocide 1864’ Site. In order to
call attention to what they call “the bitter reality and continued
repercussions created and sustained by imperialist arrogance and stubbornness”
of Russian governments over the last 150 years, a group of Circassian activists
has launchd a special website to call attention to Russian crimes against their
nation in Sochi and surrounding areas (krasnaya-polyana-genocide1864.com/).
Moscow
Roundtable Highlights Problems in Russian-Circassian Relationship. Speaking at an academic roundtable on “The
Caucasus in the History of Russia,” Valery Tishkov, the director of the Moscow
Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, noted that one of the reasons for
problems between Russia and the North Caucasus, including its Circassian
regions is the fact that “the period of the joint existence in a single state has
not been as long” as is the case with other non-Russian portions of the Russian
Federation (vestikavkaza.ru/articles/Kavkaz-v-istorii-Rossii.html).
Russians Point
to Few Post-Soviet Successes --Except Sochi.
According to a VTsIOM poll, “the majority of residents of Russia cannot
name [any] successes” over the last two decades. The one most often named by
the others is the Sochi Olympiad, an event that has not yet taken place. Seven
percent said that it was already a source of pride (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=51B6CBB6448DC).
Anti-Sochi
Posters, Banned in Perm, Go Viral on Internet.
The satirical posters of the “Welcome to Sochi” exhibition that
officials banned in the Russian city of Perm has now spread across the Russian
blogosphere (blogsochi.ru/content/vystavka-%C2%ABwelcome-sochi-2014%C2%BB,
echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/1092718-echo/
and mosmonitor.ru/articles/culture/obratnaya_storona_olimpiadyi-2014_ot_vasiliya_slonova).
Environmental Concerns Spark New Protests in Sochi. Sochi residents and activists from the Ecological Watch on the North Caucasus organized a demonstration in a central square there tocall attention to the destruction of the environment there as a result of Olympic construction (blogsochi.ru/content/ekologicheskaya-aktsiya-v-komsomolskom-skvere, blogsochi.ru/content/ekologicheskii-monitoring-pribrezhnykh-i-poverkhnostnykh-vod-goroda-sochi and blogsochi.ru/content/ekologicheskaya-aktsiya-v-sochi). Other Sochi residents staged a second protest in the city’s Kudepsta region over construction problems there (blogsochi.ru/content/kudepsta-tes-i-tos and blogsochi.ru/content/miting-vo-dvore).
Krasnodar
Governor Promises Gastarbeiters Will Be Sent Home After Construction. Aleksandr Tkachev, the governor of Krasnodar
kray, said that he would not allow gastarbeiters from Central Asia to remain in
Sochi after they finished building the venues of the Sochi gameslest they
contribute to “a growth of criminality and social tension” and transform Sochi
into a Kosovo, an apparent acknowledgement that that is what they are perceived
to be doing (blogsochi.ru/content/novaya-gazeta-olimpiada-%E2%80%93-chemodan-%E2%80%93-vokzal).
Moscow
TV Shows Open Sale of Illegal Drugs in Sochi.
Moscow’s “Rossiya” channel featured a segment showing the sale of
illegal drugs in the Olympic city, noting that local residents are concerned
but that the Russian interior ministry has been unwilling to make any comment
about what is going on (blogsochi.ru/content/telekanal-%C2%ABrossiya%C2%BB-rasskazal-ob-otkrytoi-prodazhe-narkotikov-v-sochi).
Sochi
Residents Organize ‘Law and Order’ Movement.
In order to try to force Sochi city officials to stop violating Russian
law, residents of the Olympic city are organizing a new movement, called “Law
and Order,” to press their case (blogsochi.ru/content/sezd-uchastnikov-dvizheniya-sogd-zakon-i-poryadok).
Sochi
Officials Can’t Identify Any of Their Number as ‘Pride’ of City. Despite the erection last month of a sign to
allow them to honor city officials who are “the pride” of Sochi, the local administration
has not been able so far to identify “officials about whom [Sochi residents]
can be proud,” the Blogsochi.ru site says (blogsochi.ru/content/gordost-tsentralnogo-raiona-goroda-sochi).
Will
Sochi Follow Kazan and Kill Homeless Animals?
Officials in Kazan in advance of the Universiade there have killed some
homeless animals. Given that many in
Sochi say that Kazan is a trial run for the Olympiad next year, some of them
are now asking whether Russian officials in Sochi will follow Kazan’s lead in
this regard too, despite repeated promises not to (publicpost.ru/blog/id/30480/).
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