Note: This is my 45th 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
Volgograd
Terrorist Acts Seen Helping Putin Change Focus of Sochi Coverage ... “The Volgograd bombings won’t ruin Russia’s
Sochi Olympics,”according to commentator Peter Weber. “In fact, [they] may help
Vladimir Putin” by allowing him to refocus Western coverge of the games. Up to now, he writes, “Western coverage of
the Games has been mixed with protests over Russia's anti-gay laws. President
Obama is pointedly
sending over a delegation with two openly gay athletes, for example.
Russia is already calling
for international solidarity, and if the focus of the Games shifts
to thwarting terrorism, history tells us that terrorism threats trump just
about every other issue. After all, fighting Islamist terrorists is one of the
few things Putin's Russia and Obama's America have in common” (theweek.com/article/index/254593/why-the-volgograd-bombings-wont-ruin-russias-sochi-olympics).
... Winning Him
Additional Support among Russian Nationalists ... In the “Berliner
Zeitung,” commentator Ulrich Krökel says that the Volgograd explosions
will work to Putin’s advantage inanother way: they will allow him to play up
the nationalist themes he has been using in recent months and win more support
from ethnic Russians against others. But he notes that “despite and perhaps
maybe because Putin is a anatic about security, [Russia] is not a stable
country.” Instead, “Russia’s multi-national society is held in check exclusively
by the power apparatus and raw materials
wealth” (inopressa.ru/article/30Dec2013/inotheme/volgograd_obzor.html).
... And Setting
Stage for Moscow to Denounce Domestic Opponents as Backers of Terrorism and
Those Foreign Leaders Who Don’t Come as Cowards. In “Yezhednevny
zhurnal,” Russian commentator Aleksandr Ryklin says that the Kremlin will use
the Volgograd violence both domestically and internationally. It will “call
those who refuse to come to our Games cowards ... and label the internal
opposition which has called for one or another kind of boycott of the Olympic
Games in Sochi as accomplices of the terrorists” (ej.ru/?a=note&id=24114).
Volgograd
Bombings Highlight Terrorist Risks and Shortcomings in Russian Approach. Commentators in Russia and abroad said that
the Volgograd bombings not only had undercut Putin’s charm offensive against
the West but called attention both to the difficulties of combatting terrorist
actions by small groups of people and shortcomings in the Russian effort. Several observers suggested that the
terrorists were clearly more “professional” in their actions than the Russian
security services, that the FSB had lost too many good people to retirement in
recent years, that Russian officials had been slow to introduce effective
security checks at transportation facilities,and that, as a result, more
attacks can be expected in the future.
At the same time, there was general agreement in both Russia and the
West that the attacks were linked to the North Caucasus and timed to affect
Sochi (tbo.com/ap/russian-suicide-bombings-raise-concern-over-sochi-olympics-20131230/, kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/236053/,
kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/236053/,
washingtonpost.com/world/second-bombing-in-two-days-hits-volgograd-in-southern-russia-32-dead-in-the-two-attacks/2013/12/30/69ae1c1c-7140-11e3-8def-a33011492df2_story.html?wprss=rss_world, rferl.org/content/terrorism-olympics-russia-sochi/25215761.html http://izvestia.ru/news/563135).
Recent Security
Exercise in Sochi Far From Successful, MVD Sources Say. The recent
security exerecise in Sochi failed to stop 25 of the 48 people posing as
terrorists from carrying out their missions, according to Sergey Ogurtsov,
deputy head of the Sochi interior ministry administration. That failure,
according to a local journalist, highlighted how relatively easy it would be
for someone to carry out a terrorist attack, despite everything that Moscow has
done. The one thing the security exercise did do, that journalist said, was to
expel many of the migrant workers who had been in the city. Indeed, Semen
Simonov, coordinator of the Migration and Law network in Sochi, “many of the
measures taken are not very effective for capturing terrorists but they do harm
the interests, rights, and freedoms of citizens” (kavpolit.com/antiterror-i-olimpiada-gde-slaboe-zveno/).
Moscow
has Already Spent 2.5 Billion US Dollars on Sochi Security As of June 2013, Russian analyst Sergey
Markedonov says, the Russian government had spent 2.5 billion US dollars on
security in Sochi. Before the games are over, it will undoubtedly spend even
more, with this line item alone being as large or larger than the total amount
spent for most past winter Olympiads. At the same time, Markedonov adds, Moscow
has been constrained somewhat in the security area lest its measures in this
area become the story of the Sochi games (caucasustimes.com/article.asp?id=21229).
Volgograd
Attacks Point to Mistake of Awarding Olympics to Sochi, Satter Says. David Satter,
an expert on Russia, says that “the terrorist attacks in Volgograd on December
29 and 30 are an ominous sign that the decision to hold the 2014 Winter
Olympics in Sochi may lead to one of the greatest catastrophes in the history
of the Olympics. The first
danger is from the terrorists. In
addition to the danger from terrorists, however, there is also a danger from
the Russian forces. As past experience shows, in a hostage situation, the
Russians will make no effort to spare innocent lives. Because of the
irresponsibility of the Olympic Committee in indulging Putin's desire for a
propaganda spectacular, the stage may now be set for there to be many more” (edition.cnn.com/2013/12/31/opinion/opinion-russia-terror-sochi/index.html?hpt=hp_t2).
Russian Olympic
Committee Sees No Need for More Security at Sochi. Russian Olympic Committee chief Alexander
Zhukov says that despite the terrorist attacks in Volgograd, Moscow has already
taken “all necessary security measures” in Sochi and that “extra security
measures ... will not be taken.” He
mentioned that the new fan passports will allow for both security and
convenience (interfax.ru/sport/news/349666, en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131230/711762565.html,
ng.ru/news/453960.html and en.rsport.ru/olympics/20131230/711762565.html).
US Government
and Olympic Committee Offer ‘Full Support’ to Moscow After Volgograd Bombings. American
officials and the US Olympic Committee offered their “full support to the Russian
government in security preparations for the Sochi Olympic Games” and said they “would
welcome the opportunity for closer cooperation for the safety of the athletes,
spectators, and other participants.” US officials said that they have had “extensive
contacts” with their Russian counterparts over Sochi security, adding that
Washington has taken “lots of security precautions” of its own regarding the
games (usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/2013/12/30/sochi-winter-games-bombings-russia-putin-security-ioc/4248745/,
kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/236071/
and reuters.com/article/2013/12/30/us-usa-russia-olympics-idUSBRE9BT0KL20131230).
Moscow
‘Not Really Concerned’ US President Isn’t Coming to Sochi. Aleksandr Zhurkov, head of the Russian
Olympic Committee, said that his group is “not really concerned” that President
Barack Obama has decided not to attend the Sochi Olympiad. The Olympics, Zhukov said, “are the
competition of outstanding sportmen and this is the main reason why they are
interesting. It’s not a summit which only the country leaders attend. So we’re
not really concerned about it” (worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/12/26/22060000-russia-not-really-concerned-about-obamas-absence-from-sochi-olympics?lite).
More than 20
European Leaders Will Be at Sochi, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Says. Vladimir Titov, Russia’s first deputy foreign
minister, says that “it is already clear that more than 20 European countries
will be represented in [Sochi] at the level of chief of state or head of
government as well as royalty.” He added that plans for bilateral meetings are
still being “formulated” (ria.ru/interview/20131231/987383131.html).
Everything is
‘Ready’ for Olympiad and Security is ‘Guaranteed,’ Russia Today Says. Those who rely
on the Russia Today television channel were told on New Year’s Day that
“everything is ready for the Olympic Games in Sochi” and that “security will be guaranteed for all
athletes and guests” who attend (blogsochi.ru/content/russia-today-v-sochi-vse-gotovo-k-olimpiiskim-igram and
Russian Prime
Minister ‘Not Sure’ Olympics will Go Smoothly. Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medveev says
that he is certain that everything will in fact be ready for the opening of the
Sochi Olympiad on February 7, but he added that “to tell you the truth, I’m not
sure that everything will be ideal and smooth.” At the same time, he suggested
that he doesn’t “think we’ll have the worst variant” and that he doesn’t “have
any concerns about the Olympics” (en.ria.ru/sochi2014/20131228/185992398/Medvedev-Not-Sure-of-Smooth-Sochi-Olympics.html).
‘Overly Tight’
Security at Sochi Leading Terrorists to Attack Elsewhere, British Expert Says. Matthew Clements, an analyst at HIS Country
Risk in London, says that Moscow has devoted so much attention to increasing
security at Sochi that it has lessened its control over other regions As a result, as the attacks in Volgograd
show, terrorists are exploiting that situation and launching attacks elsewhere
(vedomosti.ru/politics/news/20996311/ft-terakty-v-volgograde-podorvali-doverie-k-obespecheniyu#ixzz2pBJ7J9Gg).
With Sochi,
Putin Trying but Failing to Re-Brand Russia and Himself, US Paper Says. The Chicago
Tribune says in an editorial that “Putin may have thought hosting the Olympics
would boost his stature in Russia and elsewhere. The actual effect, though, has
been to focus more attention on his thin skin, contempt for Western values and
unquenchable need for control. So even his gesture of charity toward the
prisoners he freed merely underscored the arbitrary, secretive nature of his
rule, while reminding everyone that those people should never have been jailed
in the first place.The Winter Olympics could have been
Putin's opportunity to show the world a country far more humane, democratic and
open than it was when the Soviet Union hosted the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow.
Instead, he is likely to face protests, overt or oblique, by athletes and
spectators. He will find foreign news media examining how he steered Russia off
the democratic path it took after the collapse of communism.Unlike the regime
that held power in 1980, Putin has avoided a mass boycott of the festivities by
other nations. But he won't avoid a spotlight that reminds the world of his
abuses” (chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/editorials/ct-russia-putin-olympics-0102-20140102,0,2986892.story
).
Don’t Cancel
Sochi Games but Move the Competitions Elsewhere, US Columnist Urges. Philip Hersh, a sports columnist for the
Chicago Tribune, offers a creative solution for getting around “the problem of
having the Winter Games in a hard-to-reach locale with a subtropical climate,
repression of gay rights, obscene spending (and related corruption),
environmental despoilment and human rights abuses of its residents. And, oh yes, apparently serious
threats to disrupt the Games by nationalist insurgents — aka terrorists — from
nearby Chechnya. (Not to mention Dagestan, Abkhazia and South Ossetia.)” The
answer, he says, “isn’t to cancel the Olympics. And it’s too late to move them
en masse. I have another idea: Stage them — and the Paralympics — over the
regularly scheduled time period in manageable pieces at some of the cities or
countries that have been previous Winter Olympic hosts, many of which have
World Cup competitions every year. Because 99 percent of the world consumes the
Olympics via television, some people may not even notice the difference ... To those who say this would be giving in to
terrorists, my reply simply would be that it is, rather, an 11th-hour return to
sanity after the misguided International Olympic Committee decision in 2007 to
indulge Putin’s folly. This is how my 2014 Olympics would play out: The opening
and closing ceremonies can stay in Sochi. In lieu of athletes, the thousands of
military who would be on hand can march into the stadium, which will be filled
with all the friends of Putin who have gotten rich off the Games.Is this a
joke? No less so than the idea to give the 2014 Winter Olympics to Sochi in the
first place” (chicagotribune.com/sports/chi-a-lesson-plan-to-spare-the-olympics-from-sochi-20140101,0,3859512.column).
FSB Approach to
Sochi Security, ‘Questionable at Best,’ Soldatov Says. Andrey Soldatov,
editor of Agentura.ru and Russia’s leading independent analyst on that
country’s security services, “the way in which the Russian secret services
[are] responding to the threat looks questionable at the very least.” Instead of putting counter-terrorist experts
in charge of the effort, the FSB has put its “main spy hunter.” Moreover,
Soldatov says, “it seems the Russian secret services do not understand that
maintaining control over everyone and everything (essentially the idea
inherited from the Soviet past) and preventing a terrorist attack are far from
being the same thing” (telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/10544470/Russia-terror-analysis-Volgograd-and-an-Olympics-under-threat.html).
Businessweek
Documents ‘Waste and Corruption’ of Putin’s Games. In the current issue of
“Businessweek,” Joshua Yaffa documents what he calls “the waste and corruption of Vladimir Putin’s 2014 Winter Olympics,” including paying off Putin’s friends, massive kickbacks, poor planning and mafia-like interactions of the players, government and non-government alike. At the same time, he concludes that Sochi is, in the words of one of those he interviewed, hardly unique. “You will see the same thing, maybe even more,” elsewhere in Putin’s Russia. Indeed, his interlocutor said, “Sochi is just what is happening in Russia everywhere” (businessweek.com/articles/2014-01-02/the-2014-winter-olympics-in-sochi-cost-51-billion).
“Businessweek,” Joshua Yaffa documents what he calls “the waste and corruption of Vladimir Putin’s 2014 Winter Olympics,” including paying off Putin’s friends, massive kickbacks, poor planning and mafia-like interactions of the players, government and non-government alike. At the same time, he concludes that Sochi is, in the words of one of those he interviewed, hardly unique. “You will see the same thing, maybe even more,” elsewhere in Putin’s Russia. Indeed, his interlocutor said, “Sochi is just what is happening in Russia everywhere” (businessweek.com/articles/2014-01-02/the-2014-winter-olympics-in-sochi-cost-51-billion).
Olympic Torch has a Better Week. Only one serious incident involving the Olympic torch was reported this holiday week. In Samara, after one torch would not light the next one, a man lit the new torch with a lighter and then the torch burned out of control. It was thrown to the ground, smothered by a blanket of some kind, and a replacement torch was found and ignited by a lighter. Meanwhile, prices for a torch on Internet sites continued to rise, reaching 300,000 rubles (10,000 US dollars) in some cases, and officials along the route took the opportunity to buy torches for 12,800 rubles (400 US dollars), perhaps in the hopes of making a quick profit (http://www.echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/1226655-echo/, privetsochi.ru/blog/humor/39830.html and vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/22025-glava-chuvashii-vykupil-svoj-olimpijskij-fakel).
Many in North
Caucasus Expect Crackdown, Even New War, After Sochi. People in the North Caucasus say that they
fear Moscow will become even more repressive after the Olympiad when
international attention will shift away from their region and that the Russian
government may even launch a new war (vz.ru/columns/2013/12/27/666377.html, svpressa.ru/blogs/article/79845/ and http://svpressa.ru/politic/article/79817/).
‘YMCA’ Writer
Won’t Object to Use of Song at Sochi
Victor Willis, the original lead singer of Village People and author of
the lyrics for its 1978 hit, says that although it was not “written as a song
for the gay community,” if that community “want to use the song that way, go
right ahead,” although he said that he would not perform it himself. Some LGBT
activists have called for using it as a protest anthem at the Sochi Games (insidethegames.biz/olympics/winter-olympics/2014/1017652-y-m-c-a-writer-does-not-want-song-to-become-anti-gay-protest-anthem-of-sochi-2014).
Olympic Athletes
Concerned about Sochi Security After Volgograd.
US
speedskater Jilleanne Rookard said that she is “scared [Russia’s] security may
be involved [in the violence]. I don’t know if Inecessarily trust their
security forces I’m sure they want to save their image and their pride” Swedish hockey player Johan Franzen said that
now “the security will be higher [in Sochi] than they intended from the start”
(thetranscript.com/localsports/ci_24825233/2014-sochi-games-athletes-wary-threats).
Australia May Not Send Its Athletes to Sochi Because of
Security Threats. Julie Bishop, Australia’s foreign minister,
says that Canberra may not allow its Olympic team to go to Sochi because of its
concerns about security there. The Australian Olympic Committee has already
announced that because of security concerns, "None of [Australia’s]
athletes will be traveling to or from Sochi by car, bus or train (all will be
traveling by air); none will be training or competing outside of Sochi in
Russia; and none will be holidaying elsewhere in Russia after the Games" (latimes.com/travel/deals/la-trb-australia-sochi-olympics-safety-20131231,0,4025327.story#axzz2pKdqRwA9, theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/policy/chance-of-travel-ban-for-sochi-says-julie-bishop/story-fn59nm2j-1226792220281#mm-premium
and kavkazcenter.com/russ/content/2013/12/30/102542.shtml).
Amnesties All about
Improving Russia’s Image Before Sochi, Russian Commentators Say. Moscow’s recent
amnesties do not represent any “thaw” in Russian politics but are all part of a
broader effort to improve Russia’s image in advance of the Sochi Olympiad,
according to three leading Russian commentators with whom the Nakanune.ru news
agency spoke (nakanune.ru/articles/18481/ ).
Sochi is
‘Opposite of What an Olympic City Should Be,’ Italian Athlete Says. Federica
Brignone, an Italian skier, says that Sochi is “the opposite of what an Olympic
city should be,” that it “lacks the Olympic spirit,” and that security measures
have put a damper on the way in which athletes and fans interact. “To put it in simplest terms,” she said, one
can say that as an athletic venue, “Sochi ... is a ghost city built in an empty
space, ugly and without residents, memory or freedom” (inopress.ru/article/31Dec2013/repubblica/sochi.html).
‘Welcome to Sochi’ Artist Now Preparing Olympic Calendar
‘with Erotic Subtext.’ Vasily Slonov, who attracted international attention
for his “Welcometo Sochi-2014” series of posters, now says he is preparing an
Olympic calendar “with an erotic subtext” as a way to attract even more
attention and to criticize Moscow’s anti-gay policies (globalsib.com/19115/).
Olympic Spending
Now Affecting Russia’s Banking Sector.
The amount of money Moscow has been spending in preparation for the
Sochi Olympics is affecting ever more sectors of Russian life, according to a
Russian analyst, forcing cutbacks in spending on a variety of projects and now
hitting the banking sector, both directly and as a result of concerns that
Russian banks may face even larger problems ahead if Sochi’s costs go up and
the Russian economy continues to stagnate or deteriorate (apn.ru/publications/article30829.htm).
Sovkhoz
‘Rossiya’ a Metonym for the Problems of Sochi and Russia. The residents of
Sovkhoz “Rossiya,” the last population point before the Olympic Park, face a
concentration of all the problems that other residents of the Olympic city and
indeed much of Russia now face: bad roads and sidewalks, regular power and
water outages, many the result of Olympic construction, sewage lines that are
either badly connected or not connected at all, terrible smells, the
destruction of much of the beach and green spaces, and a sense that officials
are totally uninterested in doing anything about the problems of the people (kavpolit.com/chto-poluchila-rossiya-ot-olimpiady/).
Illegal
Construction Waste Sites Grow and Multiply in Sochi. Sochi residents continue to find new trash
heaps, all of them illegal and a threat to public health, the result of illegal
dumping by Olympic contractors and the failure of the authorities to enforce
the law. Several groups of citizens have organized protests and officials have
promised to help but so far there is little evidence of any improvement (blogsochi.ru/content/svalka-imeni-morisa-toreza, kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/236103/ and blogsochi.ru/content/pensionery-poobeshchali-perekryt-ulitsu-trebuya-ot-mestnykh-vlastei-ubrat-musor).
Olympic
Construction Leads to Massive Power Outages in Sochi. Some 2,000 Sochi residents were left without power
after Olympic contractors mistakenly cut through a major electric line, the
latest example of such accidents and a
problem that seems to be increasing as the contractors cut corners to try to
finish the construction that Moscow officials insist is already finished (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/235979/ and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/235896/).
Olympic
Contractors Repeatedly Tear Up Roads and Sidewalks. Sochi residents have watched as contractors
dig up roads and highways, then repave them,and then dig them up again because
there does not seem to be any plan to install infrastructure all at once and
then pave once and for all. As a result, the roads are poorly installed,
leading to the formation of huge sinkholes dangerous for cars and people alike,
dust and mud are regular features of life in the city, and many residents
cannot get to school or work because the roads are obstacles rather than
pathways (privetsochi.ru/blog/sitiproblem/39876.html, privetsochi.ru/blog/bred_sochi/39824.html
Raw Sewage
Flowing into Streets, Rivers and Black Sea. Because sewage lines have either been
improperly installed or not installed at all, raw sewage with all the smells
and dangers to health and the environment it involves is flowing into the
streets, rivers, and even the Black Sea in the Sochi region. The situation
appears to have gotten worse as construction has been speeded up in recent
weeks (blogsochi.ru/content/kanalizatsiya-po-ulitse-krasnaya and
Sochi Officials
Close Public Markets Before Opening Promised New One. Officials have closed several publc
markets, possibly to enhance security but leaving Sochi residents with few
choices to buy food, long before the new and more modern market the officials
have promised to open later this year (privetsochi.ru/blog/bred_sochi/39817.html).
No Insulin Available
for Sochi Residents. Sochi pharmacies have run out of insulin,
leaving the city’s numerous diabetics at high risk of illness or even
death. Some of them are asking who is
responsible but so far have received no answer.
In general, health care facilities for residents have deteriorated even
as officials have promised world-class medical care for Olympic visitors (privetsochi.ru/blog/Wailing_wall/39761.html and privetsochi.ru/blog/med_sochi/39772.html).
Situation of
Sochi Residents So Dire that Human Rights Watch Speaks in Their Defense. As a result of
Olympic construction, Sochi residents have been left without power, heat,
water, road access, and sanitation but with massive and illegal trash heaps and
impassable streets and roads, a situation that has prompted Human Rights Watch
to speak out on their behalf. The
organization’s Jane Buchanan said she was doing so because local officials were
either ignoring the problem altogether or taking steps to suppress those who
were calling attention to it (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/236054/).
Sochi Mayor
Admits to Being Involved with ‘Catastrophically Great Work’... Mayor Anatoly
Pakhomov who has angered city residents for his failures to protect them
against the depradatios of Olympic construction admits that over the past five years
he has been involved in “catastrophically great work,” an admission that says
more than he perhaps intended. He says road problems have been solved but that
difficulties with electricity, water and heat remain (sochinskie-novosti.com/ /).
... Says He’ll
Run for Re-Election ... Despite polls showing that two out of three Sochi
residents don’t trust him, Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov says he will run for another
term – or as Blogsochi.ru put it, “threatens” residents with more of the same (blogsochi.ru/content/zhitelyam-sochi-grozit-vtoroi-srok-anatoliya-pakhomova
and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/235837/).
... But
Dismantles Much-Criticized New Year’s Tree. After the city New Year’s tree,
an artificial one covered with pictures of real flowers, became the object of
ridicule, Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov for once has backed down and removed the
pictures, putting up more normal lights. But the mayor may have made the
situation worse by saying at a press conference “how difficult” he found it to
take this decision (blogsochi.ru/content/anatolii-pakhomov-o-%C2%ABchudo-yudo%C2%BB-elke-vozle-ofisa-gk-%C2%ABolimpstroi%C2%BB).
Sochi Resident
Wants to Know If He Can Have Foreigners in His Home. One Sochi
resident has asked Privetsochi.ru whether it is possible to have “foreigners
(not from the near abroad) in their homes.”
The blog responded that one must “temporarily register” the foreigner as
being at your address and keep the registration certificate (privetsochi.ru/blog/Flood/39908.html).
PrivetSochi Says
New Law Makes It Impossible for Blog to Announce Some Meetings. A new measure signed into law by President
Vladimir Putin imposing criminal penalties not only on those who submit a news
item about an upcoming meeting that may have goals the authorities do not
approve of but also on the site itself means that the blog will be far more cautious
than it has in publishing such announcements (privetsochi.ru/blog/sochi_site/39903.html).
Demolition of
Caucasus Riviera Complex Won’t Be Completed Before Olympiad. The demolition of the Caucasus Rivier complex
will be suspended during the Olympics because work crews will not be able to
finish the job before the games begin. (http://www.sochinskie-novosti.com/).
For Security, Russian
Post Announces Restrictions on Mail to Sochi. From now until March 31, the
Russian postal authorities will require that anyone sending a package to Sochi,
the surrounding Krasnodar kray, and the Aygey Republic bring it unopened to a
post office. The authorities have also
published a new list of banned items, including among other things firearms,
explosives, and cash(russianpost.ru/rp/press/ru/home/newscompany/item?newsid=8156
and russianpost.ru/rp/servise/ru/home/postuslug/goodslist).
Russian Efforts
to Suppress Environmentalists in Sochi Diverse and Longstanding. Russian officials have devoted particular
attention to blocking the work of Ecological Watch on the North Caucasus in
large part it appears because the group has not only exposed massive violations
of environmental laws and commitments during Olympic construction but also
reported on the ways that officials from Vladimir Putin on down have done
whatever they want to make their own vacation residences there meet their
needs. This official campaign to
“neutralize” EWNC is chronicled in the organization’s annual report at ewnc.org/node/13366.
Vitishko Appeals
Three-Year Sentence, Gains More Suppport.
Yevgeny
Vitishko, an EWNC activist, has appealed his three-year sentence and remains
out of jail while the appeal proceeds. There have been demonstrations on his
behalf in numerous Russian cities and abroad. In Sochi itself, he gave a press
conference,which had to be kept secret until the last minute to prevent the
Russian security services from blocking it that attracted a large group of
journalists from other countries (ewnc.org/node/13362 http://ewnc.org/node/13347, ewnc.org/node/13342 and newizv.ru/society/2013-12-27/194926-ot-olimpiady-podalshe.html).
Four EWNC
Activists Detained but Released Unbowed.
Four Ecological Watch on the North Caucasus activists, Aleksey
Mandrigelya, Anna Mikhailova, Tatyana Borisova, and Valentina Borisova, were
arrested and held for 24 hours apparently because they were continuing the
group’s investigation of an illegal fence that Governor Aleksandr Tkachev has
had erected around his property on public land.
They were kept in horrific conditions but on their release on January 1
were unbowed and carried a sign indicating that for the environment 2014 is
already 1937 (facebook.com/notes/environmental-watch-on-north-caucasus/four-more-activists-victims-of-governors-illegal-fence/10152193277163833 http://ewnc.org/node/13352 and
Berlin Protesters
Call for Recognition of Circassian Genocide and Boycott of Sochi Games. Members of the Circassian-Russian Union
for Justice, joined by Kurdish, Israeli, Daghestani and Turkish activists,
organzed a demonstration in front of Berlin’s Russian House of Science and
Culture to demand the right of return for Circassians, international
recognition of the Circassian genocide, the restoration of a Circassian state
in the North Caucasus, and an end of racism and xenophobia in the Russian
Federation. Some of those taking part
carried signs calling for a boycott of the Sochi Olympiad (kwas-1972.livejournal.com/708775.html and facebook.com/groups/CircassiansGenocideSurvivors/permalink/564224573657327/).
FSB May Stage Terrorist
Provocation at Sochi, Circassian National Movement Warns. The Circassian National Movement says that it
fears the FSB will carry out a “mega-terrorist action in Sochi” in order to
place the blame on the Circassians and thus justify in the eyes of some further
repression of the Circassian nation. It
says Circassians oppose all such violence and support only “civilized methods
of struggle” (freecircassia.ucoz.com/news/oficialnoe_zajavlenie_cherkesskogo_nacionalnogo_dvizhenija/2013-12-17-352).
Coca-Cola Puts
Up, Then Takes Down Pictures of Those Protesting Its Sochi Sponsorship. LGBT activists were surprised when Coca-Cola
posted pictures of some of those who have staged protests against the company
for its sponsorship of the Olympics given Moscow’s anti-gay policies, but they were
equally surprised when they discovered that “the photographs have now
disappeared” from the company’s website (pinknews.co.uk/2013/12/30/coca-cola-deletes-photos-of-gay-rights-protest-against-its-sochi-2014-sponsorship/).
Volgograd
Blasts Latest of 32 Terrorist Incidents Involving Fatalities in 2013. The Kavkaz-Uzel.ru news agency says that the
two terrorist incidents in Volgograd bring to 32 the number of such incidents
involving one or more deaths in the North Caucasus over the last year. It notes
that “many experts have more than once spoken about the danger of possible
terrorist acts of extremists directed at guests and participants of the 2014
Games” (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/235965/).
Memorial Issues
Special Report on Instability in the North Caucasus. The Memorial
Human Rights Center has issued a new book assembling its quarterly reports on
the North Caucasus since 2009. Prepared by Memorial’s OlegOrlov, the book,
entitled “Three Years of ‘Stability,’” in fact highlights the continuing
instability in the region. According to
Memorial’s head, Aleksandr Cherkashov, there are now “two ‘authors’” of what is
taking place there: “the armed underground and the Russian federal authorities
which are carrying out a policy of struggle with the band formations” (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/235973/).
Bookings at
Sochi Hotels Lag Behind Predictions, Officials Say. The Sochi Organizing Committee was expected
to rent 3,000 rooms at hotels in Sochi for the events, but to date, it has
reserved only 613, just one of the reasons why overall bookings at many but far
from all hotels in the Olympic city currently lag what had been projected As a result, at least some hotel owners are
considering converting their rooms to condominiums and offering them for sale
while attention is focused on the city. (bfm.ru/news/240247?doctype=article).
Blogger Suggests
Olympic Torch in Sochi is Giving the World the Finger. In a post on Blogsochi.ru, one writer
says that whatever Moscow intended, the Olympic torch that will stay lit during
the games represents in his mind what can only be “our response to the
world according to Freud” (blogsochi.ru/content/nash-otvet-miru-po-freidu).
FMS Office Open
Only One Hour Each Work Day for Migrants to Register. In yet another move clearly intended to force
gastarbeiters to leave Sochi, the Federal Migration Service has opened the
office such workers must visit to gain
registration only one hour each working day.
According to Blogsochi.ru, the lines are long and many of those in them
are extremely frustrated (blogsochi.ru/content/ufms-%E2%80%93-khozhdenie-po-mukam-prodolzhaetsya).
Handicapped Face
Dangers in Sochi.
Despite Moscow’s pledge to ensure that the Olympics will be accessible to all
persons with physical handicaps, a requirement of getting the Games, activists
in Sochi have documented that in many places, the special strips designed to
warn the blind that they are at the edge of a road or rail line are so poorly
attached that they are coming off. According
to one, “if someone without good eyesight tries to rely on them, he could
become an invalid confined to a wheelchair” (blogsochi.ru/content/taktilnye-polosy-v-olimpiiskom-sochi and http://blogsochi.ru/content/dostupnaya-sreda%E2%80%A6-otkleilas).
After the Games,
Sochi Makes Plan for Becoming a ‘Resort without Tourists.” Because its projected income will fall faster
than its projected expenses, the Sochi city government is planning to sell off
some of its property beginning as early as later this year. In addition, in looking to the future, the
city is planning to fundamentally revise its current general plan given that it
is going to be, in the words of officials, “a resort without tourists” (sochinskie-novosti.com/
and sochinskie-novosti.com/).
Unpaid for Two
Months, Sochi Workers Take to the Streets. A group of workers who have
been preparing Sochi for the Olympics has gone into the streets to demand that
their corporate employers pay them what they are owed. Many have not been paid
for two months. Others have appealed to
prosecutors and the police, but the latter refused to accept their declarations
(blogsochi.ru/content/v-sochi-rabochim-gotovivshim-gorod-k-olimpiade-2-mesyatsa-ne-platyat-zarplatu and www.sochinskie-novosti.com/ ).
Circassian
Genocide of 1864 Recounted in National Geographic. The January issue of “National Geographic”
provides a chilling retelling of the Circassian genocide of 1864. “The Circassians made their last stand in the
small canyon that is now called Krasnaya Polyana,” one of the Sochi Olympiad
venues. “After their surrender in 1864
the Circassians were expelled, and refugees died by the thousands on their way
to Sochi. Survivors were shipped to various corners of the Ottoman Empire. Some
of them died aboard the Turkish vessels, cast overboard into the Black Sea” (ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2014/01/sochi-russia/forrest-text?rptregcta=reg_free_np&rptregcampaign=20131016_rw_membership_n1p_intl_ot_w#).
Sochi
Ethnographic Museum Focuses on Circassians and Those Who Displaced Them. The museum contains some 1,000 items on the
Shapsugs, a sub-group of the Circassian nation and its millennia in the region,
but also on the history of the culture of the various nationalities who arrived
after the Circassians were expelled from the region in 1864. It is possible
that Russian officials will point to the existence of this museum as evidence
that they are not ignoring the Circassian issue during the games, although
Circassians say that the museum itself is more about anthropology than history
and contains little or nothing about the tragedies their nation has suffered
over the last two hundred years at the hands of Russian forces (facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=691450694232531&id=192171867493752).
No comments:
Post a Comment