Note: This is my 39th 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
Russian Sports
Minister Says Anti-Gay Law Should Have Been Adopted Only After Sochi. Vitaly Mutko, Russia’s sports minister and
the man who has had to defend Moscow for the Russian law banning the propaganda
of LGBT values to young people, told RBK that “perhaps the state authorities
should have waited a little ... It was possible to calculate how much resonance
it would cause in the West, especially
in the run-up to the Sochi Olympics.” In short, for Mutko, the law is
appropriate but it should only have been adopted after the games (lgbtqnation.com/2013/11/russias-sports-minister-mistake-to-pass-anti-gay-law-before-olympics/).
Austrian Paper
Sees ‘Unmistakable Parallels’ Between Sochi 2014 and Berlin 1936. “Der Standard”
says that there are “unmistakable parallels” between the Sochi Olympiad in 2014
with its anti-LGBT background and the Berlin Games of 1936 that occurred even
as Hitler was preparing the Holocaust, parallels that people should not ignore
(derstandard.at/1381373606449/Berlin-1936--Sotschi-2014-Unuebersehbare-Parallelen). Anti-Sochi
activists are drawing the same parallels, photoshopping pictures of Hitler and
Putin, with the suggestion that “every leader wants his own Olympiad” (facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=127576124047170&set=a.125414810929968.20056.125385497599566&type=1&theater and facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=126933004111482&set=a.125414810929968.20056.125385497599566&type=1&theater).
LGBT Supporters
Rally against Russia Day at NY Stock Exchange. LGBTs and human rights activists demonstrated
against the holding of a “Russia Day” at the New York Stock Exchange because of
Moscow’s anti-gay laws. The protest is part of a broader US LGBT effort against
the Sochi Olympiad. One guard said that
the protesters had achieved a signal success: in contrast to past “days,” the
Exchange did not put up the Russian flag outside its headquarters (buzzfeed.com/mariahsummers/gay-rights-activists-protest-russia-day-at-the-new-york-stoc).
Russian Anti-Gay
Law is an Attempt to ‘Exclude Sexuality’ from Human Rights and Citizenship,
Expert Says. Writing in the “Russian Analytic Digest,” Kai
Wilkinson, an Australian expert on gay rights, argues that “the introduction of
legislation seeking to keep LGBTQ people firmly behind a close and policed
closet door ... marks an attempt by Russia to actively exclude sexuality
fromnorm of human right and by extension citizenship. [This step] representsthe
operationalizationof traditional values as a basis for human right [and] sets a
dangerous precedent for the denial of the rights of citizenship to any group at odds with traditional values, as well as
encouragingthe use of moral vigilantism to censure dissent of any kind” (css.ethz.ch/publications/pdfs/RAD-138.pdf).
Attacks on Gays
in Russia Continue. Two gunmen opened fire in a Moscow gay club.
Meanwhile, in an indication that the Russian authorities are not doing enough
to stop such violence, a Russian Orthodox activist was not sentenced to jail
after shooting at a gay demonstrator who was carrying a balloon that the
activist said “offended” him (huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/18/russia-gay-club-shooting_n_4296064.html and advocate.com/news/world-news/2013/11/12/russian-orthodox-activist-spared-jail-time-attacking-gay-demonstrator).
Russian Court
Fines Lady Gaga for Promoting Homosexuality. A Russian court fined the group
that organized Lady Gaga’s tour in Russia last May 615 US dollars for violating
the Russian law against gay propaganda to young people. One of those who was found guilty in this
case said “the Russian government is criminal. Oppression will be met with
revolution. Russian LGBTs you are not alone. We will fight for your freedom” (pinknews.co.uk/2013/11/15/russian-court-fines-lady-gagas-concert-organiser-for-promoting-homosexuality-to-children/).
International
Anti-Doping Agency Provisionally Suspends Russian Drug Testing Lab. The World Anti-Doping Agency gave the Russian
authorities until December 1 to bring its drug testing laboratory up to
international standards or face the prospect that WADA would permanently suspend
it. If the suspension stands, that would
be both an embarrassment and create significant delays for Sochi competitors.
WADA did not specify in public just what the problems were but at least one of
them appears to be that the director the Russians had hired to head the Olympic
lab had been arrested for drug abuse in the past. Russian officials have
pledged to correct the problems promptly (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233867/,
reuters.com/article/2013/11/18/olympics-doping-moscow-idUSL4N0J33D920131118,
en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131118/701911984.html,
en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131115/701280948.html,
and sochi2014.rsport.ru/sochi2014/20131117/701656124.html).
Russia’s Torch
Travails Continue, Sparking Mockery and Cartoons. The Olympic
torch apparently did not go out this week as often, but its route through the
Russian Far East sparked mockery and cartoons. Some focused on the expenses
incurred – some 22,000 troops are guarding the route – but others found the
pictures of it either absurd – flags and torches coming out of rivers, to give
but one example. As a result, a Yelkin
cartoon showing Putin in Olympic garb carrying Russia as an Olympic torch that
is burning at the other end went viral (blogsochi.ru/content/chisto-porzhat, sochi2014.rsport.ru/torchrelay/20131121/702546899.html, privetsochi.ru/blog/Flood/37490.html and twitter.com/larussophobe/status/402433398603403265/photo/1).
Russians Lied
about Circassian Support for Sochi Games, US Activist Says. Russian media claims that a delegation of
Circassian leaders from abroad adopted an official expression of support for
the Sochi Olympics are a complete invention, according to Nikhad Yunis, a
member of the International Circassian
Organization from the United States. In fact, he said, he and most
Circassians continue to oppose the gameson the site of the genocide of their
ancestors (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233734/ and aheku.org/news/society/4990).
Circassians Use
Istanbul Marathon to Oppose Sochi Games. Circassian participants in the Istanbul
marathon wore shirts and carried signs calling on Turkey and other countries
not to take part in the Sochi Olympiad (ivedihaber.com/haber/16524-spor-turkiye-2014-kis-olimpiyatlarina-sporcu-gondermesi.html#ixzz2jwzQizrT, haberand.com/istanbul-maratonu-nda-soci-protestosu-h-377528.html
and hekupsa.com/cherkesiya/diaspora/1991-cherkesskie-aktivisty-prinyali-uchastie-v-evrazijskom-marafone).
Maykop
Circassians Declare 2014 ‘Year of Grief.’
The Maykop Adyge Hase votedto declare2014, the 150th
anniversary of the Circassian genocide “a year of grief.” Members said they
would have done so even if the Olympiad had not been scheduled to take place in
Sochi but that that decision makes this declaration especially necessary and
important (natpress.ru/index.php?newsid=8537
and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233656/).
Current
Definition of Genocide Reflects Stalin’s Ideas and Needs to Be Broadened. Circassians who have sought to gain
international recognition for the genocide of their ancestors at Sochi in 1864
have typically been told that the international definition of genocide doesn’t
apply to them. But that definition, Stanford’s Norman Naimark argues in a new
book, “Stalin’s Genocides,” reflects the Soviet dictator’s thinking and is too
narrow. He says that it must be broadened to include other forms of mass murder
of groups (stanford.edu/news/2010/september/naimark-stalin-genocide-092310.html and gumilev-center.ru/sovremennye-koncepcii-genocida-narodov-kavkaza/).
Circassians are
Only Asking for an Apology, Scholar Says.
Sara Rainke, a specialist on Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union,
says that the Circassians are demanding “only an apology” for what Russia did
to their ancestors. If Moscow were to
meet them part way on this, “the problem with Sochi would not be so large,” she
writes in Berlin’s “Tageszeitung” (secret-r.net/arkhiv-publikatsij/13-2013/ukradennaya-rodina).
German Greens
Leader Says Sochi Games Must Acknowledge Circassian Tragedy. Speaking at the opening of an exhibit on
Circassian history in Hamburg, Cem Ozdemir, the head of the German Greens
movement, said that at a minimum Moscow must acknowledge the tragedy that the
Circassian people suffered there in 1864 (abendblatt.de/hamburg/article122135508/Gruenen-Chef-Oezdemir-Kultur-der-Tscherkessen-bewahren.html and voelkerkundemuseum.com/570-0-Tscherkessen---Vom-Kaukasus-i-n-alle-welt).
Germany’s
Circassians Call for Berlin to Boycott Sochi. The Circassian
Cultural Union of Hamburg has issued a new appeal for the German government to
boycott the Sochi Olympiad because the competitions are set to take place on
the site of the 1864 genocide of the Circassian people (sochi2014-nachgefragt.blogspot.com/2013/11/boykottaufruf-des-tscherkessischen.html).
Spending on
Sochi Threatens Future of Circassian Scholarship in North Caucasus. Because of the high cost of the Sochi Games,
Moscow has fired 45 rsearchers at the Adygey Republic Institute of Humanitarian
Research who have been workingon Circassian
issues. While the Russian government has been cutting staff at many
universities around the country, this draconian move will almost certainly
reduce the amount of research being conducted and published on Circassian
issues in the future (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233791/).
Openly Gay New
Zealand Athlete Plans to Challenge Anti-LGBT Law at Sochi. BlakeSkjellerup, a New Zealand speed skater,
won’t “go back into the closet in any way” to avoid drawing the wrath of
Russian officials. He may wear a special rainbow badge that has been designed
for him bearing the words, “Blake Skjellerup – Proud 2014” (edition.cnn.com/2013/11/20/sport/sochi-2014-skjellerup/).
Accident at
Fisht Stadium Claims a Life. An industrial accident at the
still-uncompleted Fisht Stadium where the Olympic Opening Ceremony is suppoed
to take place cost the life of one worker and sent two others to the hotel (blogsochi.ru/content/na-stadione-%22fisht%22-pogib-rabochii-dvoe-nakhodyatsya-v-reanimatsii).
Charges Brought
Against Two Airlines for Delaying Flights at Sochi. Russian prosecutors have filed charges
against two airlines for failing to maintain their schedules and delaying some 300 passengers as a result (http://www.sochinskie-novosti.com/2013/11/20/
).
English-Language
Sochi Radio Begins Broadcasts. Sochi Today, an English-language station, has
begun 24/7 broadcastsat 101.5 FM in Sochi and 105.8 FM in Krasnaya Polyana to
provide news and information to visitors (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/v-sochi-nachinaet-veshanie-pervoe-angloyazychnoe-radio.20131121.70943.html).
Riviera Hotel
Caught Dumping Untreated Waste into Sochi Sewers. The luxury hotel, like many new buildings in
Sochi, has now been connected with the city’s sewer system, but unlike most of
them, it has refused to set up a filtration system to prevent the flow of
certain toxic substances into the city’s sewers. A special city commission has identified the
violation of city ordinances and may bring criminal charges because of the harm
this is doing to the city and its budget (sochi-24.ru/proishestviya/otel-rivera-ulichili-v-sbrose-neochishennyh-stokov.20131121.70935.html).
Leaning Towers
of Sochi Case Settled. A Sochi court has partially satisfied those who brought
suit against a construction company for failing to follow building rules and
thus allowing the erection of buildings there that began to tilt and had to be
destroyed lest they collapse on residents or passers by (privetsochi.ru/blog/sitiproblem/37689.html).
No Sochi Group
Prepares ‘Know Sochi’ Kit for Athletes.
The organizers of the NoSochi movement acknowledge that they have failed
to stop the Winter Olympics which will take place on the site of the 1864
genocide and are now focusing on
providing special kits for athletes that will tell those taking part in the
games the tragic story of the Circassian deportation and genocide. The group plans to send these kits to more
than 300 athletes from 60 countries (indiegogo.com/projects/know-sochi-olympics-on-the-land-of-genocide and nosochi2014.com).
Moscow’s NTV
Says Circassians Among Those Who Seek Russia’s Disintegration. NTV broadcast a program entitled “Who Wants
to Divide Russia?” in which it accused various people in the Russian Federation
and abroad, including the author of these lines, of seeking the disintegration
of the country. Among those singled out for special attention was Ibragim
Yaganov, a Circassian activist (vk.com/id10118456
). Circassian groups
denounced the attack as a “provocation” (aheku.org/news/society/4989).
FMS Harasses Deutsche Welle Journalist. Officers of the Federal Migration Service in Sochi detained Yekaterina Lukyanova, a journalist working for Germany’s Deutsche Welle radio, claiming she was “a foreign agent” and violating Russian law, although when challenged, the officers could not specify which one. She in turn accused the officers of theft when they took her tape recorder, and they backed down and allowed her to leave the FMS facility, Moscow’s “Nezavisimaya gazeta” reported (interpretermag.com/sochi-migration-service-catching-journalists/).
FMS Harasses Deutsche Welle Journalist. Officers of the Federal Migration Service in Sochi detained Yekaterina Lukyanova, a journalist working for Germany’s Deutsche Welle radio, claiming she was “a foreign agent” and violating Russian law, although when challenged, the officers could not specify which one. She in turn accused the officers of theft when they took her tape recorder, and they backed down and allowed her to leave the FMS facility, Moscow’s “Nezavisimaya gazeta” reported (interpretermag.com/sochi-migration-service-catching-journalists/).
Human Rights
Watch Calls on Sponsors, Journalists to Challenge Russia’s Anti-Gay Law at
Sochi. HRW has joined
All Out in calling on Western sponsors of the Olympics and journalists who will
be covering the games to challenge Russia’s anti-gay law but so far with little
success. When the sponsors have
responded at all to the appeals, they have said that they have turned the issue
over to the International Olympic Committee, which has already made it clear
that it has no intention of making an issue of the Russian legislation. Not a single corporate sponsor has agreed to
do more, HRW officers say. All Out for its part has gathered 150,000 signatures
calling on Coca Cola, one of the sponsors, to take a stand, but it is a measure
of the level of fear in the Russian Federation that only 88 people in that
country have joined in a corresponding effort (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233773/).
IOC Demands
Russia Block Broadcast of ‘Pirate’ Videos during Games. In order to protect the rights of the sponsors
of the Games and the contracts with the media companies covering them, the
International Olympic Committee has demanded that the Russian authorities set
up a system to ensure that any private and thus “pirated” videos of the
competition that are put on line are taken down within a few minutes. Russian
officials say they will form a group consisting of experts from the country’s
force structures to do so (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233804/).
6,000
Journalists Have Visited Sochi to Date. Even though the Olympics are more than
three months away, some 6,000 journalists from other parts of the Russian
Federation and abroad have visited Sochi.
Many of them have come on Moscow-organized and supervised tours, but
many others have come independently. As a result, there is a steady and
increasing flow of stories which not only flatter the authorities but point to
the differences between what officials say and what is actually the case (blogsochi.ru/content/smi-na-olimpiiskikh-obektakh-v-2013-godu).
Krasnodar
Governor Sends 3000 Workers to Help Finish the Job at Sochi. Krasnodar Kray Governor Aleksandr Tkachev has
organized the dispatch of 3000 “volunteers” to Sochi to help ensure that
Olympic construction is completed. “You
must undertand,” he told them, “that everything depends at home. Yes, your
wives and children remain at home and that’s tough,but you are building the
Olympiad and you should be proud” (sochi-24.ru/politika/gubernator-tkachev-proveril-olimpijskie-strojki.20131120.70872.html and
sochi-24.ru/politika/na-blagoustrojstve-sochi-zadejstvovali-chinovnikov.20131115.70653.html).
EU-Russian Civic
Forum Calls on Moscow to End Persecution of Environmentalists in Sochi. The EU-Russian Civic Forum, a coalition
of NGOs of the European Union and the Russian Federation, has called on Moscow
to end the persecution of members of the Ecological Watch on the North Caucasus
and other environmental activists working in the Sochi area (ewnc.org/node/13080). The procuracy
of Krasnodar Kray has now said it will investigate the matter (ewnc.org/node/13074).
Jordan’s
Prince Ali Calls for Attention to Circassian Issue at Sochi.
Prince Ali of Jordan says that the international athletic community should not
be focusing only on the FIFA competition in Russia in 2018 but also on the
Sochi Olympiad and that while it is “not FIFA’s job to get involved in the
internal politics of a country,” the group “has a responsibility” to ensure
that the competitions are conducted within the rules and after having addressed
issues like the status of gays and the Circassians. Ali, who is a vice
president of FIFA, adds that “The issues of racism or any discrimination – be it
from players against players, be it from fans against fans or from workers or
against workers – need to be tackled. At least we have to try our very best to
diminish it as best we can” (weareasia.com/en/media/news/showNews.cfm?NewsID=1051).
Billions for
Sochi But Nothing for Russian Teachers and Doctors or for Public Safety. Ever more Russian commentators are pointing
to the ways in which spending for Sochi means that Moscow has no money to pay
teachers and doctors promised salary increases or to guarantee public safety.
For example, Yuliya Latynina says, so
much has been spent on stunts like sending the Olympic torch into space that
the Russian government couldn’t find funds to guarantee the security of planes
or airports. Indeed, other writers say, spending on Sochi has divided Russia
into “two worlds,” one of Moscow officials who enrich themselves and another of
ordinary Russian people who are increasingly impoverished as a result of what
the Kremlin is doing (novayagazeta.ru/columns/61019.html andstoletie.ru/obschestvo/dve_rossii_dva_mira_188.htm).
Moscow Puts
Olympic Committee Not FSB in Charge of Information Security at Sochi, Soldatov
Says.
Andrey Soldatov, Russia’s leading independent specialist on the intelligence
and security agencies there, says that Moscow’s latest moves to monitor and
control the use of cellphones and other electronic devices at Sochi are disturbing
not only by their unprecedented breadth but also by the fact they are being
done entirely openly, with Moscow assigning responsibility for them to the
Olympic organizing committee rather than the FSB. That means, Soldatov says, that “the Russian
authorities consider such monitoring of Olympic guests so natural that, without
thinking about it,” they have given responsibility for it not to the security
services but to a body that has not performed such functions ever before. While that does not mean that the FSB will
not be involved, it does indicate that there has been a spreading of such
security efforts into parts of Russian officialdom many have assumed were
separate from them (ej.ru/?a=note&id=23741).
Sochi Security
Zone to Cover 4,000 Square Kilometers, Jane’s Clements Says. Moscow is is focusing its security effort on
a zone extending100 kilometers along the coast and 40 kilometers inland,
according to Matthew Clements, an analyst at Jane’s Defense Weekly. What is striking about his report is that most
observers had assumed that any threat would come from inland rather than by sea
(therepublic.com/view/story/8c021afd72364c63af51c5ac9d0b3be4/OLY-Sochi-Tight-Security).
Trash and
Bicycles as Sochi Security Threats.
One Sochi resident suggests that trash in bags around Sochi could easily
conceal a bomb, and other Sochi residents say that the ongoing
counter-terrorism exercise suggests that Russian authorities are especially
concerned about the possible use of bikes as the vehicles of choice for any
terrorists entering Sochi (privetsochi.ru/blog/bred_sochi/37603.html and privetsochi.ru/blog/bred_sochi/37487.html).
Moscow Postpones
Trial of NGO Accused of Being ‘Foreign Agent’ Until After Sochi. A Russian court has postponed the trial of
the Public Verdict NGO which the authorities have accused of being a foreign
agent until February, possibly in order to avoid attracting more unfavorable
media publicity in advance of the Olympiad (sobkorr.ru/news/5289E6E6DA2A6.html).
Sochi Spending
Hurting Many Russian Regions, Zubarevich Says. Moscow’s spending on Sochi is leading to
cutbacks in subsidies for most Russian regions even though the central
government has done nothing to eliminate the unfunded mandates it has imposed
on them, according to Natalya Zubarevich, a professor at Moscow State
University who has served as an expert advisor at the UN and the World Bank.
She says that as a result, the country’s economy is not recovering but rather
sinking deeper into recession (znak.com/urfo/articles/18-11-16-07/101512.html).
Moscow Cracks
Down on Pirating of Sochi Trademark.
The Russian authorities continue to crack down on companies that exploit
without permission the Sochi Olympiad trademark (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233861/ and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233739/).
But it has so far not succeeded in blocking those who seek to sell Olympic
torches online or prevented the sale of its own special Sochi-themed Sochi
currency for more than face values (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233415/
and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/231305/).
Ever More Sochi
Officials Charged with Crimes.
Although many officials in Sochi have benefitted financially from
preparations for the Sochi Games, an increasing number of them are being
charged with a variety of crimes and even sentenced to prison terms. In 2010, only one official was charge with
the misuse of his office; in 2012, six cases, involving nine city officials,
were begun (blogsochi.ru/content/olimpiiskii-aspekt-sochinskogo-pravosudiya).
Sochi’s Law and
Order Movement Seeks Prosecution of Local Paper. The local newspaper in Sochi, “Mestnaya,” has
attacked the independent Law and Order Movement there for its criticism of the city administration. In the
past, the group has felt that the best response is not to dignify these charges
by responding at all. Now, however, in the face of what is views as
increasingly slanderous attacks, Law and Order has called on prosecutors to
bring charges against the editors of the paper. Whether they will or not
remains to be seen, but any court case would shine a bright light on the way in which the city has used this
outlet to repress independent groups (blogsochi.ru/content/kleveta-delo-nakazuemoe).
Some Olympic
Sites Declared Open But are Not Really Finished. According to local residents, officials have
declared certain Olympic-related facilities open even though visits to them
shows that they are far from finished.
One example of that is the Adler railroad station which President
Vladimir Putin officially opened but which as photographs show still requires a
great deal of work to actually finish (blogsochi.ru/content/vokzalnyi-kompleks-%C2%ABadler%C2%BB-otkryli-no-ne-dostroili).
Kremlin Said
Using Sochi Not Only to Steal from Russians but to Take Away Their Rights. Anaatoly
Baranov, the editor of FORUM.msk, says that in addition to using the Sochi
Games to steal from Russians and enrich themselves, the members of the Putin
regime are showing a complete disregard for the constitutional rights of
Russian citizens. It turns out, Baranov says, tht “a certain Putin can simply
by his own order suspend the application of the Constitution of the Russian
Federation” by requiring registration and limits on movement that the 1993
basic law prohibits (forum-msk.org/material/news/10118986.html).
Meanwhile, a Duma committee has approved special traffic rules for Sochi,
further limiting Russians’ right of free movement. Igor Levedev, the vice
speaker of the Duma from the LDPR, says that instead of passing such
legislation, Moscow should “simply say to the citizens of Russia that the
Olympiad in Sochiis not for them” but only for the elite and for foreigners (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233726/).
Damage from
September Storm Still Not Overcome. The
September 25 storm that knocked down trees, flooded parks and streets, and
damaged the seawall and many buildings has still not been fixed nearly two
months later, local residents and journalists say. The city administration says that it doesn’t
have the equipment it needs to do so because that is being used to finish
Olympic buildings. But as a result, many
parts of the city are still a mess and may well continue to be through the time
of the Games (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/spustya-dva-mesyaca-posledstviya-uragana-ne-ustraneny.20131119.70795.html).
New
Trial of Drug Dealers Points to Expanding Problem. Three gastarbeiters in Sochi have been
sentenced to lengthy terms in prison for selling illegal drugs, a case that
will do nothing to ease relations between Russians and these Central Asian and
North Caucasian workers. But this case, the latest in a series of such actions in
recent months, suggests that the illegal drug trade is expanding in Sochi as
more money and more people flow into the city in advance of the games (sochi-24.ru/proishestviya/byvshie-stroiteli-organizovali-v-sochi-narkogruppu.20131119.70798.html).
Plane that
Crashed in Kazan was Originally Slated to Fly to Sochi. The Boeing 737
that crashed near Kazan was originally scheduled to fly to Sochi, but it was
shifted to the Kazan route because “the number of passengers for Kazan exceded
the number who were flying to Sochi,” according to company officials (privetsochi.ru/blog/news_sochi/37602.html).
‘Misha and His
Mothers Go to the Olympics’ Book Now Online. A children’s picture book that an
American group has printed 10,000 copies of for distribution in Sochi to
protest Russia’s anti-LGBT laws is now online.
Among the legends of the pictures in it are the following words of
Misha: “I dream of a Russia where my family can be treated equally like in
other countries. I’m scared when the men on TV say they want to take me away
from my moms. My name is Misha. My
family has two moms and a dog named Laika. My moms and I went to the Olympics
and new new friends from around the world. My new friend Pascal has two dads
who are married. They live in France. . I’m scared when the men on TV say they
want to take me away from my moms. It
made me feel sad to see the police beat up people who are gay like my moms. I
dream of a Russia where my family can be treated equally like in other
countries. I’m scared when the men on TV say they want to take me away from my
moms.” The producers of this book say
that they do not believe it violates Russian law but say that local officials
may nonetheless seek to confiscate it and arrest those who distribute it (privetsochi.ru/blog/sochi2014/37581.html).
Some Sochi
Residents Fear Their City Will ‘Go the Way’ of Stavropol. Some Sochi residents fear that the influx of
people from the North Caucasus to help build Olympic sites will trigger the
kind of ethnic tensions that already are defining life in Stavropol. Their
fears are especially great because in Sochi, as was the case in Stavropol, ever
more ethnic Russians are leaving, thus accelerating the transformation of the
ethnic mix of the city and its environs (privetsochi.ru/blog/politics_sochi/37446.html).
Some Sochi
Residents Stop Paying Rent Because They Haven’t Been Paid Wages. The failure of
some contractors to pay wages to people working on Olympic construction
projects has now had a cascading effect. Beginning November 1, residents in
some Sochi apartment buildings are not paying their rent. If landlords move to expel them, the
residents will use the court cases to protest wage arrears (privetsochi.ru/blog/Criminal_Sochi/37424.html).
New Sochi
Construction Impressive, But Who Will Use It After Olympiad? Many Sochi residents and visitors are
extremely impressed by the Olympic facilities now being completed. But an
increasing number are asking who will use all these buildings after the Games
and why “people on the Black Sea coast need yet another [city like Moscow]?” (kavpolit.com/est-li-zhizn-posle-olimpiady/). For a listing
of just how many new buildings, roads, and infrastructure lines have gone up,
see novayagazeta.ru/sports/60980.html.
Olympic Opening
Ceremony to Feature Lezginka Dancing.
The organizing committee has announced that a group of young artists
from the North Caucasus will dance the lezginka at the opening ceremonies of
the Sochi games, despite the fact that many Russians are offended by that dance
when North Caucasians do it in their cities (nazaccent.ru/content/9707-na-otkrytii-olimpiady-v-sochi-stancuyut.html).
Few Ordinary
Russians Will be in the Stands at Sochi.
According to Maksim Gladkikh-Rodionov, the director of an auditing firm,
few ordinary Russians will be in the stands at Sochi because of high prices.
Most of the seats will be taken by “representatives of the [Russian]
bureaucratic elite” and foreigners (svpressa.ru/society/article/77532/).
Two-Thirds of
Russians Think They’re At Risk in Terrorist Attacks. According to a new Levada Center poll, 66
percent of Russians say that they “do not exclude” the possibility of new
terrorist attack, and 71 percent say they are concerned that they or those
close to them could be among the victims (interfax.ru/russia/news.asp?id=340975).
Some Muslims in
Russia Fear Sochi Portends for Them What 1936 Berlin Olympiad Did for Jews. According to a commentary on the
Islamcivil.ru, some Muslims find themselves worrying about whether the Sochi
Games could presage the kind of violence against them that Hitler’s Olympiad
did for the Jews. Most, the commentary
says, do not think that the situation in the Russian Federation is that dire,
but all hope that such fears will prove without foundation (islamcivil.ru/eto-ottuda/).
Olympic
Contractors Continue to Illegally Dispose of Trash. Despite the
protests of environmentalists, contractors working on Olympic sites are
continuing to dispose of trash illegally and in ways that threaten public
health. Sometimes they create new dumps without authorization; at other times,
they simply throw the trash out (privetsochi.ru/blog/sitiproblem/37485.html, facebook.com/notes/environmental-watch-on-north-caucasus/new-landfill-being-built-illegally-to-accomodate-sochis-trash/10152100309938833, ewnc.org/node/13086 and privetsochi.ru/blog/komunalka/37556.html). Meanwhile, a
group of Sochi residents is using trash to make art, both to highlight how much
construction and other waste there now is and to try to make something
beautiful out of what is anything but (privetsochi.ru/blog/eco-sochi/37553.html).
Olympic Construction Destroying Sports Facilities for
Sochi Residents.
Sochi residents are increasingly complaining about one of the ironic
developments in their city over the last year: The companies building Olympic
facilities are destroying many of the most popular sports facilities that
residents and especially their children had been accustomed to use (privetsochi.ru/blog/sitiproblem/37406.html and privetsochi.ru/blog/bred_sochi/37450.html).
Blogger Proposes
Contents for Sochi Survival Pack.
Anyone living in Sochi needs a survival pack, one blogger has said, and
it should include water, heating devices, batteries and generators, and
internet connectivity. Otherwise, he says, the individual’s fate will be less
than good (privetsochi.ru/blog/komunalka/37407.html).
Many Sochi
Residents Continue to Live without Electricity and Gas ... Despite
promises and claims to the contrary, many people in Sochi do not have regular
electric power or gas for cooking and heating. That is forcing many of them to
live “by the light of the moon” (blogsochi.ru/content/luna-v-olimpiiskom-sochi).
... without
Potable Water ... Sochi’s water supply has been so contaminated
that many people are posting pictures of water that is green or black or brown
and reporting that it has terrible smells and is unsafe for drinking. The authorities have responded by dumping
massive quantities of chlorine into the water supply but that hasn’t helped in
many cases, residents say. Some are now calling the water that comes out of
their taps “Olympic juice” (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/kachestvo-vody-v-zhilyh-mikrorajonah-stabiliziruetsya.20131120.70849.html, sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/sochivodokanal-soobshaet-voda-podaetsya-s-primesyami.20131118.70735.html, privetsochi.ru/blog/komunalka/37493.html,
... Without Heat
or Safe Streets... The
heating season has begun in Sochi, but many residents are not getting any heat
or hot water. The city authorities have
claimed that everything is in order, prompting some Sochi residents to ask “why
do they keep lying to us?” Others are complaining that walkways, underpasses
and streets are so torn up that it is impossible to move safely fromone place
to another (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/meriya-sochi-otopitelnyj-sezon-uzhe-nachalsya.20131119.70804.html, privetsochi.ru/blog/komunalka/37595.html, vesti-sochi.tv/obshhestvo/21124-rekonstrukcija-naberezhnoj-reki-sochi-zatjagivaetsja,
... But Now with
Smog ... Sochi
residents have seen somethingthat they suspect is worse than fog: smog, the
result of construction fumes and atmospheric conditions (privetsochi.ru/blog/pogoda_sochi/37734.html#cut).
... And Higher
Prices.
Because Moscow has imposed a price freeze during the Olympic Games, many
merchants in Sochi are boosting prices now in order to establish a higher
baseline during the Olympiad (privetsochi.ru/blog/The_social_and_economic_parties_of_our_life/37571.html).
Sochi Airport
Attracts 12 Percent More Passengers This Year than Last. Russian officials proudly noted that 2.1
million passenger have passed through Sochi’s airport so far this year, 12
percent more than for the same period in 2012.
But visitors note that despite many upgrades, the airport still has “a
reading corner” that resembles those of Soviet times (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233557/ and twitter.com/tggrove/status/401716198519615488/photo/1).
Casting Call for Female Olympic Medal Presenters. Russian
Olympic organizers have advertised for 113 female assistants who will present
the medals at the Sochi Olympiad. Only women between 17 and 35 are eligible,
the organizers say, and they must be at least 5’5” tall. Once seleted, the
presenters will be trained in make up and hair styling (en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131115/701270919.html).
North Capital
Can Aspire to 2024 Summer Games if 2014 Winter Games in Sochi Succeed. The Russian
Olympic Committee says that St. Petersburg would be “a serious contender” to
host the 2014 Summer Games if the Winter Games next February in the southern
Russian city of Sochi are a success (en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131116/701423619.html).
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