Note: This is my 36th 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
Putin Says All
Will Be Welcome at Sochi Despite Russia’s Anti-LGBT Law. President Vladimir Putin told visiting IOC
head Thomas Bach that “we will do everything …so that both the participants
andguestsfeel comfortable in Sochi, regardless of ethnicity, racial heritage or
sexual orientation.” He did not say that he would seek the repeal of Russia’s
anti-LGBT law or that he would take new measures to stop the anti-gay and anti-minority
actions that have been sweeping through the Russian Federation in recent weeks.
In effect, he promised to suspect the application of Russian laws in Sochi
during the Games just as the leaders of some other countries have done in the
case of past Olympiads, most notoriously Adolf Hitler in 1936 (en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131028/697407864.html
and nazaccent.ru/content/9535-putin-zaveril-mok-chto-na-olimpiade.html).
Anti-Gay Law
Gives ‘Green Light’ to Skinheads and Fascists, LGBT Activist Says. Andrey Tanichev, owner of one openly gay club
in Sochi, says that Moscow’s “idiotic law” banning gay “propaganda” to children
has given “a green light to skinheads, nationalists and facists” who want to
attack homosexuals. Given that homosexuality was a crime in Russia until 1993
and classified as a mental illness until 1999, the legislation is being read by
many as a declaration of open season on gays, whatever the authorities say (nst.com.my/world/sochi-becomes-focus-for-gay-rights-activists-ahead-of-olympics-1.387095).
Sochi Gays Say
‘Closet Life is Safer.’ A Sochi
lesbian says that “the closet life is safer” and that “we are safe as long as
we do not express our feelings in the streets. But if we kiss outside of a
school or kindergarten, we get arrested.” Another gay man there sas that “the
less we protest on the streets, the les we blow up the scandal, the safer our
lives will be” (thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/10/26/sochi-s-furtive-gay-clubs.html).
IOC Head Refuses to Meet with Russian LGBT Groups. Saying everything in
Sochi is “in great shape” and that he has “no issues of concern,” IOC President
Thomas Bach refused to meet with representatives of Russian LGBT
organizations. Anastasia Smirnova of the
Russian LGBT Sport Federation says that she sees this decision as “yet another
indicator that the Sochi Olympics are far from being a plagorm to uphold and
promote Olympic values,” adding that “it is now impossible to imagine an
inclusive event where rights and human dignity of all are respected. The law on
‘propaganda’ is degrading in its nature, suggesting that LGBT people are
dangerous to children, families, and society, and that it is the responsibility
of the authorities to protect other citizens from us. It is crucial to discuss
and define concretely how implementation of the non-discrimination principles
will be ensured in such climate. The refusal by Thomas Bach to meet with LGBT
organizations in Sochi is disappointing, but we are glad that this discussion
with the IOC will still take place” (thenewcivilrightsmovement.com/ioc-president-refuses-to-meet-with-russian-lgbt-organizations-while-in-russia/news/2013/10/30/77673#.UnFnIOJcUUN).
Russian
Officials Taking DNA Samples from Muslim Women in North Caucasus. In advance of the Sochi Games, Russian
officials are taking DNA samples from Muslim women across the North Caucasus
ostensibly so that the authorities can identify body parts if any of the latter
become suicide bombers. This action, a clear violation of the Russian
constitution and Russian law, will do little to increase security in the region
but a great deal to further divide the Russian and non-Russian communities
there and alienate the latter (blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/10/31/russia_is_collecting_saliva_from_muslim_women_because_terrorism and articles.chicagotribune.com/2013-10-31/news/sns-rt-us-olympics-sochi-dagestan-insight-20131030_1_sochi-olympics-dagestan-islamist-insurgency ).
Putin May Extend
Sochi’s Orwellian Security Measures After Them, Expert Says. The most
frightening aspect of the intensive and invasive security arrangements at Sochi
may not what they will mean to competitors and visitors but that they may be
only a testing of these measures before
they are extende to the Russian Federation as a whole, according to Mark
Galeotti . Indeed, he suggests, such future applications may be the largest
“legacy” of the Games themselves (www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/mark-galeotti/on-your-marks-get-set%E2%80%A6-intercept).
Blogger Expects
Sweeping Crackdown Across Russia After Sochi Games. Oleg Makarenko, a businessman who blogs for
Moscow’s “Vzglyad” newspaper, says that he expects Vladimir Putin to launch a
sweeping crackdown across Russia immediately after the Sochi Games and set
entirely new rules of the game for Russian politics and Russian life in the
process (vz.ru/opinions/2013/10/24/656456.html).
Terrorist
Actions, Which Had Been Falling in Russia, Seen Increasing in Coming Months. A blogger who tracks ethnic issues says that
after a 50 percent decline in the number of terrorist acts over the last year,
a decline Moscow has celebrated, the number of such attacks is likely to grow
in the coming months not only in the Sochi
region but across the country (oleg-leusenko.livejournal.com/1030266.html).
Olympic Sponsors Worried about LGBT Boycott of Their
Products, Olbermann Says. ESPN host Keith Olbermann says that some
Sochi sponsors are getting worried that gay activists will not watch the games
or buy the products produced by those firms that sponsor them. That could hurt
the firm’s bottom line. “There might be
an American boycott of the Olympics, but much more likely — at least reading
the tea leaves of the remarks of that terrified IOC marketing chairman — much
more likely is a boycott by advertisers or the American broadcasts of the Sochi
Olympics,” he said. “And if the advertisers bail — and they could bail out over
the Russian anti-gay laws or the Russian stance on Syria or the quality of
NBC’s announcing team, it doesn’t matter which — the Russians are screwed, and
the American telecasts are screwed and, in the only thing that matters to the
International Olympic Committee, the International Olympic Committee is screwed.”
Moreover, he added “just comparing the 2014 Sochi ‘MasterCard’ Olympics to
Hitler’s master race Olympics, this has terrified the money,” the ESPN host
added. “And the money terrified is money that will do what you want”(rawstory.com/rs/2013/09/10/olbermann-corporate-sponsors-terrified-that-sochi-olympics-will-be-another-master-race-olympics/).
Olympic Torch
Continue to Spark Problems. The Olympic
flame being carried through Russia continues
to spark problems. Sometimes it goes out unexpectedly, and at others it
explodes in the faces of thos e carrying it. This has made it the object of
political cartoons, jokes and suggestions that if Moscow can’t organize the
handling of the torch relay, it certainly won’t be able to handle the Olympic Games (mskbabr.com/?IDE=120120,
americanthinker.com/2013/10/welcome_to_the_danger_games.html,
blogsochi.ru/content/tekhnicheskoe, newsland.com/news/detail/id/1269928/
rusistka.livejournal.com/494331.html,
and ruskline.ru/news_rl/2013/10/28/v_kulturnoj_stolice_rossii_pogas_olimpijskij_ogon_v_rukah_ministra_kultury/).
Torch
Manufacturer Comes Under Fire.
Krasmash, the Krasnoyarsk company that produces many of Russia’s
missiles and submarine parts, is now better known for producing Olympic torches
that don’t work. Media and government
investigators are swarming over its plant trying to discover why the very
expensive and guaranteed Olympic torches are not working as advertised. Company officials say they conducted an
extensive testing program, but observers note that they were paid an
extraordinary amount in a non-competitive process and that corruption may have
trumped safety (iberiantimes.com/business/casestudy/features/siberian-company-feeling-the-heat-over-olympic-torch-for-sochi-2014/ Investment).
Circassians
Around the World Denounce Moscow-Organized Circassian Statements. In response to what they believe was a
Moscow-orchestrated declaration of support for the Sochi Games, Circassian
groups and their supporters around the world have issued stinging denunciations
of that group’s widely reported comments and reaffirmed their opposition to the
holding of the games on the site where in 1864 Russian forces conducted
genocide against their ancestors. Many
of these groups said the only good thing about the Sochi Games was that this
Moscow festival had had the unintended consequence of calling international attention
to the Circassians and their plight not only in the North Caucasus but also in
Syria (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/20720-gosti-olimpiady-poznakomjatsja-s-kulturoj-cherkesov,
natpress.ru/index.php?newsid=8451, freecircassia.ucoz.com/news/zajavlenie_mezhdunarodnogo_cherkesskogo_soveta/2013-10-30-341,
circassiapassport.com/2013/10/28/international-circassian-association-and-rodinas-empty-words/
, kavpolit.com/galopom-na-olimpiadu-v-sochi/,
justicefornorthcaucasus.info/?p=1251671230, kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232398/,
kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232367/
and justicefornorthcaucasus.info/?p=1251671215).
Gastarbeiters
Expelled from Sochi Say Russian Firms Bringing in Yugoslavs to Replace
Them. Immigrant workers from Central
Asia and the Caucasus many of whom have not been faced, forced to live in
inhuman conditions, and now been expelled say Russian Olympic contracts have
“just laid us off and brought in new workers. Yugoslaves, I saw the buses
coming in,” an indication that the authorities want to appear to be traking a
stand against illegal immigration but do no want to give up this source of
cheap and often defenseless labor (telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/10414885/Sochi-chaos-behind-the-scenes-of-worlds-most-expensive-Winter-Olympics.html).
Russian Actions ‘Openly Violate’ Olympic Principles, Human
Rights Watch Says. Jane Buchanan, HRW’s deputy director for Europe and Central
Asia, said that the IOC has only 100 days to get Russia to stop its violations
of laws and principles and urged new IOC chief Thomas Bach to take immediate
steps given the illegal exploitation of migrant laborers, pressure on
journalists and civic activists, and violations of ecological and historical
preservation laws. She said her
organization was going ahead with its plans for an Alternative Map of the Olympic
Torch to call attention to human rights problems in Russian cities and regions
(kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232612/).
Moscow Says
Olympics Have Improved Sochi Environment … Vice Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak
says Olympic construction has actually improved the environment of Sochi and
its region, a view echoed by Prime Minister
Dmitry Medvedev and Thomas Bach, the new head of the International
Olympic Committee (ria.ru/sochi2014/20131030/973781276.html, en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131030/697861615.html
and http://ria.ru/sochi2014/20131030/973781276.html).
… But Pictures, Evidence
and Experts Say Otherwise. But pictures taken by residents, an investigation
by the Associated Press, and statements by independent and lower-ranking
Russian government experts say that it will take years for the region to
recover and that some of the environmental losses may be irreplaceable (kavkaz-uzel.ru/category/price_olympic, bigstory.ap.org/article/russia-breaks-zero-waste-olympic-pledge and ria.ru/science/20131025/972567480.html#ixzz2iiuHyUk9).
Russian Fans’
Racism and Violence Stirs More Anger in International Sports Groups. International sports organizations continue
to react to reports about racist chants and violent acts by Russian fans, with
some of these groups demanding the imposition of serious punishments on the
Russians and some now talking about boycotting future competitions. Russian officials have denied most of the
allegations, but they are investigating some others. The Moscow and regional
Russian media are giving intensive coverage both to the charges and to the
realities (en.rsport.ru/football/20131031/698061762.html, vesti.ru/doc.html?id=1148234,
ej.ru/?a=note&id=23575,
sport.mail.ru/news/football-worldcup/15382128/,
nazaccent.ru/content/9499-vice-prezident-fifa-predlozhil-zapretit-netolerantnym-fanatam-smotret.html, vesti.ru/doc.html?id=1146920, rus-obr.ru/ru-web/27252 and mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/yaya-toure-russian-racism-could-2528238).
International
Ski Federation Head Says He Won’t Be at Sochi. The Sochi Games “will not be a big party. That’s
not the Russian way,” Gianfraco Kasper, the head of the International Ski
Federation said, adding that the Sochi region is an inappropriate place to hold
a winter competition. He said that the
Sochi competition is likely to be “a turning point” in the history for the
Olympics, prompting limits on the size and cost of such competitions. If the
current “gigantism” continues, he said. They “will
disintegrate: always more, always bigger. They’re no longer manageable, and
they will get out of control”
(blogsochi.ru/content/glava-lyzhnoi-federatsii-boikotiruet-sochi sport-express.ua/rest/olympism/news/185450-glava-fis-podverg-kritike-organizatorov-olimpiady-v-sochi-sochi-2014.html and rawstory.com/rs/2013/10/25/bad-news-olympics-fans-no-big-parties-planned-for-sochi-games/).
Gay Activists Protest Sochi Olympic
Event in New York. Chanting that
“homophobia has got to go” and urging Americans “not to buy Putin’s lies,” a
group of gay activists in New York staged a protest on the edges of a meeting
in Times Square devoted to the US Olympic Team and its plans for Sochi. Duncan Osborne, a member of Queer nation,
said that .“The USOC and the international community should not legitimize
Russia’s violations of fundamental human rights by holding the Games in that
country. Russia has placed itself well outside the bounds of global human
rights standards and no international event should be held there” (lgbtqnation.com/2013/10/activists-protest-russias-anti-lgbt-laws-at-times-square-olympic-countdown/).
Sochi has Been
Split into One City for the Rich and Another for Everyone Else, Residents Say. Sochi residents
say that the integrity of their city has been destroyed by massive investments
that benefit only a tiny number of the wealthy while disrupting the lives of
the poorer majority and that the situation is only going to get worse because
many of the traditional business owners there are fleeing to other cities or
even abroad because of the worsening business climate they now experience (svpressa.ru/society/article/76627/).
Kozak Now Says
Sochi Facilities Will Be Completed by December 25. Even though Russian officials from
Vladimir Putin on down have insisted that facilities for the Olympic games are
complete and need only “cosmetic” attention, Vice Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak
who is overseeing them now says that they will be finished only by December 25,
almost a year later than promised. He
also told Moscow papers that there are enormous piles of construction debris
still to be hauled away. To that end, Russian officials are recruiting students
and pensioners from across the country to clean up the mess left by contractors
(blogsochi.ru/content/vedomosti-kak-zhivet-sochi-za-100-dnei-do-olimpiady
and blogsochi.ru/content/sto-dnei-do-prikaza).
Storm Damage to
Sochi Sea Wall Threatens Olympic Construction.
Vladimir
Slobodyan, head of the Moscow Institute of Ecoloical Prediction and Research,
says that the deformation of the coastal areas of Sochi, including damage to
the sea wall there threaten Olympic facilities by weakening the soil under
their foundtions. Had officials planned for these problems, they could have
been addressed earlier and easier, he said, but now, fixing these problems
without massive reconstruction will be hard or even imposible (blogsochi.ru/content/realnoe-olimpiiskoe-nasledie%E2%80%A6).
MVD Now Says It
Will Have 42,000 Police and 10,000 Troops in Sochi for Security. Russia’s interior ministry says it is
boosting the number of police and troops it will be sending to Sochi and
environs for the Olympics to 42,000 and 10,000 respectively. Many of these will
be send to Krasnodar kray from other regions of Russia in the near future (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232575/).
Sochi Residents Thrown
Out of Their Homes; Some May Be Expelled from Russia. Ever more Sochi
residents are being expelled from their homes to allow officials to finish up
Olympic construction. Some of them may
even be expelled from the Russian Federation.
While this process has been going on for months, it has only recently
begun to attract significant media attention (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/sudi-ograbili-babushku-policiya-pressuet-video.20131030.69970.html,
sobkorr.ru/news/526F8E86419AB.html,
kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232484/ and blogsochi.ru/content/semyu-s-detmi-siloi-vystavili-na-ulitsu-v-sochi).
28,000 Georgians
Sign Petition Urging Boycott of Sochi Games. Some 28,000 Georgians have now
signed a petition calling on Tbilisi to boycott the Sochi Games. Some activists
there have stressed that Georgia can do no less given that “Sochi was the
capital of Circassia,” a nation that Georgians have close ties with, have
recognized the genocide of, and are pledged to support (lasvegassun.com/news/2013/oct/28/oly-georgia-olympics/ and kavkasia.net/Georgia/2013/1382045741.php).
Russian Sports
Channel Acknowleges Sochi Games to Cost 47 Billion US Dollars. Rsport.ru, which serves as the official
spokesman for Russian sports, now says the Sochi Games will cost 47 billion US
dollars, 40 billion of which will go to infrastructure. These amounts are almost an order of
magnitude larger than Vladimir Putin has admitted and, because they are given
on a site many Russian fans turn to, they are certain to increase popular anger
at the amount of money being spend on this activity (en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131029/697586229.html).
EWNC Points to
Continuing Legal Violations in Construction of Road to Putin Dacha. Ecological Watch on th North Caucasus
reports that violations of environmental protection laws and highway
construction rules continue to mount in one part of the Olympic region in
particular: in the construction of the highway to Vladimir Putin’s dacha (ewnc.org/node/12980 and blogsochi.ru/content/vysokoskorostnaya-magistral-moskva-adler-okonchatelno-pokhoronit-kurortnyi-sochi).
Sochi to Be
‘Poligon for Russian Special Services,’ Soldatov and Borogan Say. Andrey Soldatov and Irina Borogan, Russia’s
leading independent speciallists on the country’s secretive security services,
say that Moscow is allowing the security agencies to do whatever they want in
the name of security there, including many invasive procedures that violate
Russian and international law (sovsekretno.ru/articles/id/3890/).
Path of Olympic
Torch in Karelia Kept Secret from Journalists. Officials in Karelia have refused to tell
journalists what the path of the Olympic torch will be lest the journalists or
activists interfere with its passage.
These officials have also create “forbidden zones” in Petrozavodsk in
order to guarantee security for the torchbearers and otherwise discommoded
local residents. According to one
report, “hen the Olympic flame left [that city], all its residents breathed a
sign of relief” (sobkorr.ru/news/526F45B5D26E0.html).
Merchandizing
Russian Flag in Athletic Competitions Sparks Anger. Russians are upset that some organizers of
athletic events in Russia are now allowing sponsors to put their logos right on
the Russian flag, something one Russian described as “a final shame” of the
country (echo.msk.ru/blog/shenderovich/1186884-echo/).
Sochi School
Children Challenge Olympic Boosters.
At what was supposed to be a celebration of the Sochi Games, just 100
days away, sports officials visited Sochi schools, but many pupils challenged
them. One said that “it is a little strange and unusual that the winter
Olympiad will take place in Sochi. It woud be better to have summer games here.” Another said she’d like to get involved in
ice skating but that the local rink had been closed. And a teacher said that
Olympic construction had brought crowds and lines but little of benefit to her
city (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232542/).
Sochi’s Muslim
Women Get Organized. The Muslim women of Sochi have formed their
own group to promote Islamic values to their families and to take part in any
public exhibitions about the historical residents of the city (islamrf.ru/news/russia/rusnews/29749/).
St. Petersburg’s
Hopes to Become a Future Olympic City Said ‘Wishful Thinking.’ Some in
Russia’s northern capital, including Mayor Georgy Poltavchenko, would like to
promote their city as the site of the 2024 Summer Games, but Russian sports
writers say that this is wishful thinking until after Sochi is a success and
until St. Petersburg proves it can handle such an event by successfully organizing
the 2018 World Cup competition (en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131028/697410542.html).
Sochi Police
Tell Jew He Can’t Pray in Public. A
Sochi policeman told a visiting Jewish believer that he could not pray in a
public train station but might do so in the station’s toilets. Another
policeman said he could pray in public but only for 20 minutes (newsru.com/religy/29oct2013/shafit.html).
40 Percent of
Russians Say Olympic Preparations Hurt Country’s Economy. Four out of ten
Russians told the Public Opinion Foundation that preparations for Sochi have
had “extremely negative consequences for the Russian economy,” outnumbering those
who said the games were helping the economy or having no impact at all. Half of the respondents said they would like
to see the Olympic torch – only 7 percent said they would be going to the games
– but 34 percent said they were indifferent to the much-ballyhooed torch route
(polit.ru/news/2013/10/29/wouldlike/).
Moscow Website
Publishes Map Showing Neighborhoods with ‘Illegal Aliens.’ Russian State
Radio’s Vesti FM published a map on its website marking on the neighborhoos
that supposedly have dense populations of illegal gastarbeiters, an action that
Human Rights Watch says is a virtual invitation for Russian nationalists to
attack in those areas. Russian civil
society activists have called for the site to take the map down, but the
station has refused saying that it is “not calling for violence” and that “the
map merely highlights neighborhoods, not [specific] addresses” (hrw.org/news/2013/10/28/dispatches-open-invitation-violence-russia).
Destruction in
Sochi from Latest Storm Documented. A Russian blogger has posted more than
25 photographs showing the destruction of the coastline and related facilities
in Sochi during the course of the latest storm. Not only do the pictures show
that much now needs to be rebuilt or provided with additional foundation
support, but they indicate that earlier efforts to patch things up in this area
were hasty and inadequate (bednenkiy.livejournal.com/64644.html).
Sochi City
Government Wants to Forcibly Close Evangelical Church. To make way for more profitable housing
construction, the Sochi city administration is seeking to force the local
evangelical church to close and then sell the building and land. The church is
fighting back in court, but it is far from clear whether its members will be
able to protect the place where they meet and pray (http://baznica.info/article/vlasti-sochi-reshili-s-molotka-prodat-khra).
Sochi Said
‘Fumbling’ Its Tourist Opportunity.
Most Olympic cities use the Games to promote their cities as a whole so
that even after the competition people around the world will have a reason to
go there, but according to Russian branding experts, Moscow has promoted the
Olympics and nothing else about Sochi. That means people will associate Sochi
only with the games and have little interest in going there after the Olympiad
ends (themoscowtimes.com/business/article/sochi-risks-fumbling-its-olympic-tourism-opportunity/488562.html).
Moscow Has
Destroyed What Society There Was in Sochi, Activist Says. Because of the legacy of the Soviet system
and the actions of the current Russian government, there is no society in Sochi
to take responsibility for running the city, according to a local civic
activist. “There are individuls nad
small grous which present only their only interests and are incapable of
expressing a common Sochi-wide interest,” and that is exactly how the
authorities in Moscow and in Sochi want it because the lack of broader groups
gives them greater freedom of action (blogsochi.ru/content/o-samom-glavnom-%E2%80%93-kak-zhit).
Sochi Merchants
Upset by Rules for Olympic Period.
Sochi entrepreneurs have had to agree to get their supplies only between
midnight and eight am during the period of the games, as well as agree to other
restrictions on their activities, something that they say means they won’t be
able to operate effectively. And they
are especially angry because “not in a single one of the points of the laconic
document [they have been forced to sign] is anything said about the
responsibilities of the authorities” to them (blogsochi.ru/content/drovami-ne-topit-bele-ne-sushit-kak-menyaetsya-sochi-v-preddverii-igr-2014 and
Moscow Scholar
Acknowledges Problems in Sochi Construction. Mikhail Lychagin, a geographer at Moscow State
University, says that he does not believe that Sochi construction has had an
irreversibly negative impact on the environment but acknowledges that the
construction of Olympic facilities has ot been “absolutely positive” in that
regard (sochinskie-novosti.com/2013/10/29/%D1%81%D1%82%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B9%D0%BA%D0%B0-%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%B8%D0%BC%D0%BF%D0%B8%D0%B9%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B8%D1%85-%D0%BE%D0%B1%D1%8A%D0%B5%D0%BA%D1%82%D0%BE%D0%B2-%D0%B2-%D1%81%D0%BE%D1%87%D0%B8-%D1%83%D0%B6%D0%B5-%D0%BD%D0%B5-%D0%BD%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%B5%D1%82-%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%BE%D0%B1%D1%8B%D1%85-%D0%B7%D0%B0%D0%B3%D1%80%D1%8F%D0%B7%D0%BD%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8%D0%B9-%D1%81%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B4%D1%8B/ ).
Putin and Kozak ‘Hope
for Snow’
But Order More to be Stored in Freezers.
President Vladimir Putin and Vice Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak say that they
“hope for snow” during next February’s games but have ordered the stockpiling
of 700,000 cubic meters of the stuff just in case, almost twice as much as
officials had said the authorities were keeping in freezers should the Sochi
winter prove to be too mild (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/promyshlennye-obekty-v-kudepste-likvidiruyut-zimoj.20131029.69902.html).
Sochi Residents
Demonstrate in Support of Greenpeace and Arctic
Sunrise. A small group of
environmental activists in Sochi staged a protest in support of those
Greenpeace activists on the Arctic Sunrise who have been arrested by the
Russian authorities. They carried signs saying “Activism is not a crime” and
“Freedom for the Arctic” (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/v-sochi-podderzhali-aktivistov-grinpis.20131028.69868.html).
Expulsion of
Gastarbeiters Eases Concerns of Some in Sochi. The roundup and expulsion of Central Asian
and Caucasian gastarbeiters in Sochi has eased the concerns of some in that
Olympic city that the population of their city would remain dramatically
changed even after the games are over, but the departure of these workers has
left many vacancies that construction and other firms are struggling to fill (sochi2014.rsport.ru/sochi2014/20131029/697547638.html).
US Sends
Diplomatic Security Agents to Help in Sochi.
The US embassy in Moscow says that the United States, as part of an
informal agreement between Presidents Vladimir Putin and Barack Obama, has sent
a team of Diplomatic Security agents to help ensure security at the Olympiad (natpress.ru/index.php?newsid=8473).
Novgorod Resident Angered when Officials Allow Georgian to Carry Olympic Torch. Residents of Novgorod are upset because Olympic officials decided, apparently at the last moment, to allow an ethnic Georgian to carry the Olympic torch through the city. Earlier, these same officials had promised two ethnic Russian girls that they would be given that honor (kavpolit.com/pircxalava-otobral-olimpijskij-ogon-u-novgorodskix-studentok/).
Thanks to Sochi
Spending, Term ‘White Elephant’ Enters Russians’ Vocabulary. As a result of
extraordinarily expensive projects that have little longterm benefit, a Polish
commentator says, Russians are now using a new term, “white elephant,” to
describe what is taking place under President Vladimir Putin (inosmi.ru/russia/20131028/214270724.html).
Sochi Corruption
Case Described in Detail. Many writers
have talked about the extraordinary corruption in and around Sochi, but a new
article details exactly how one corrupt enterprise stole so much and so easily.
It thus provides a window into a world that the Russian authorities have done
their best to keep closed (blogsochi.ru/content/istoriya-odnogo-raspila).
Corruption
Involved in Legalization of Illegal Construction. Many wealthy or well-connected Russians have
been able to have many of their 800 illegal construction projects in Sochi
blessed as legal by local officials and this combination has helped destroy the
skyline of the city and undermine all previous city plans (sochinskie-novosti.com/%D1%8D%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%BC%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%B0-%D0%B2-%D0%BA%D0%B0%D0%BC%D0%BD%D0%B5/).
Rostov Modeling
Agency Advertises for Young Women to Work in Sochi During Games. A Rostov-na-Donu modeling agency has
advertised for 400 attractive young women to work in Sochi during the Olympiad.
Besides smiling and meeting guests, their duties are not otherwise described
but they are promised earning of 400 US dollars a day (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/20693-devushkam-predlagajut-rabotat-na-olimpiade-za-400-v-den).
Krasnodar
Authorities Detain Civic Activists in Advance of Olympiad. The authorities in Krasnodar kray are
detaining ecological and human rights activists for various periods, apparently
in an attempt to intimidate them in advance of the Sochi Olympics (kavpolit.com/predolimpijskaya-zachistka/).
Moscow Unveils
Underwater Machine Gun to Provide Security at Sochi. Russian officials have shown to the media
their new underwater machine gun, an amphibious assault rifle which can be
fired under water and above it, as part of their armory for the Olympic Games (perthnow.com.au/technology/amazing-russian-underwater-machine-gun-could-be-used-in-sochi-2014-winter-olympics/story-fnhod511-1226747777866).
Kudepsta
Residents Continue Protests. Residents
of the Kudepsta district of Sochi are continuing to block traffic in an effort
to force the authorities to live up to their promises not to build a new power
station in their area (kavpolit.com/stoyanie-na-kudepste/).
Gay Group Plans ‘Open Games’ in Moscow. The Russian LGBT
Sport Federation plans to hold an “open” games in Moscow three days after Sochi
in order to showcase gay sports figures and challenge Russia’s anti-gay law.
Its organizer told “The New York Times” that “I’m not afraid. I’m apprehensive.
We don’t know how the government will take this” (nytimes.com/2013/10/27/world/europe/open-games-in-moscow-to-test-an-antigay-law.html?_r=1&).
Russian
Officials Put up a Real Potemkin Village. Russian officials have often
been accused of erecting “Potemkin villages” to hide the real situation in
their country, but now in Sochi, they have done so in reality, putting up large
canvases with pictures of houses on them to cover unattractive and unreconstructed
apartment blocks in the city (blogsochi.ru/content/potemkinskie-derevni-v-sochi-ili-olimpiiskaya-butaforiya).
Moscow TV Says
West Engaged in Cold War-Type ‘Hysteria’ over Gay Rights in Russia. A Russian
television channel has said that American media are engaged in a campaign to
generate “hysteria” about gay rights in advance of the Sochi Games, a campaign
that is unprecedented since the end of the Cold War (russian.rt.com/article/17276).
Sochi Streets
Become Canals Because of Bad Drainage.
The storm sewers in Sochi are so inadequate that after any heavy rain,
residents say, many of the streets become like the canals of Venice with cars
having to go through very deep water (blogsochi.ru/content/vo-dokanal).
Russian
Nationalist Says Country Doesn’t Need Sochi Games. Maksim
Kalashnikov, a Russian nationalist commentator, says that the country doesn’t
need the games and that the way they have been organized is “a crime.” For what has been spent on them, it would be
possible to build “a second Russia,” with new houses and social facilities for
all (blogsochi.ru/content/kalashnikov-o-tselesoobraznosti-olimpiady-v-sochi).
Russian Labor
Ministry Asks Regions to Send Unemployed to Sochi … The Russian
Ministry of Labor has asked all the regions of the Russian Federation to send their unemployed
to Sochi to help finish construction and clean up the city before the Games,
the latest indication that the roundup of gastarbeiters is making it difficult
for contractors to complete their work (ria.ru/sochi2014/20131025/972645562.html#ixzz2iktELw8K).
… As Finance Ministry Triples Budget for
Cossack Presence in Sochi. The Russian
finance ministry says it has allocated three times as much to support the
presence of Cossack forces in Sochi than it had announced earlier, an
indication both of growing cost overruns and of growing security concerns (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232300/).
Gay US
Commentator May Not Speak Out in Moscow.
Johnny Weir, an openly gay former US figure skating champion who will
work as an NBC commentator at the Sochi
Games, apparently won’t speak out against Russia’s anti-gay laws. He told the “New York Times” that he “risks
jail time just going there, but the Olympics are not ht eplace to make a
political statement.” But in a comment on NBC’s Today Show, he was somewhat
ambiguous about what he will in fact do: “I’m a gay American. I’ve married into
a Russian family … While this law is a terrible thing tht you can’t be gay
publicly in Russia, I plan to be there in full support of our brothers and
sisters there and not be araid. If I get arrested, I get arrested; if not,
great” (en.ria.ru/sports/20131024/184338593/Gay-US-Skating-Star-to-Comment-on-Sochi-Olympics-for-NBC--Media.html and www.nytimes.com/2013/10/24/sports/outspoken-weir-will-be-quiet-on-russian-law.html?_r=2&).
Three Dozen
Members of US Congress Call on USOC to Defend Gays at Sochi. Three dozen members of the US Congress have
signed a letter to Scott Blackmun, head of the US Olympic Committee, calling on
him to defend the First Amendment rights of US athletes against the IOC which
in deference to Moscow says they must not conduct any political actions in
Sochi (pjmedia.com/blog/gop-falls-short-in-standing-up-for-first-amendment-rights/).
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