Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 15 – The Russian media
which had predicted the victory of the Russian competitor in this year’s Eurovision
song competition, something that would have given Moscow a boost and the right
to host next year’s competition, have fallen to the level of an old Soviet
anecdote now that Crimean Tatar Jamala has won for her people and Ukraine.
In Soviet times, the story was
widely told that when Nikita Khrushchev met with John F. Kennedy at Vienna for
a summit, the two decided on a footrace.
Not surprisingly, the young American president defeated the older and
significantly more out of shape Soviet premier, putting the Moscow media in a difficult
position.
Moscow newspapers and television
could hardly report the facts of the case because that would boost the
Americans and represent a slap in the face to Khrushchev. As a result, they came up with a strategy
that characterized much Soviet reporting about things – and one that has now
reemerged in the age of Vladimir Putin.
After the Khrushchev-Kennedy race,
Moscow media said, the Soviet premier “thanks to his heroic efforts” finished “second
from first,” while the American president who represented the rotting
capitalist West and despite his very best efforts was only able to finish “second
from last.”
The report in “Vesti” this weekend is
unfortunately not atypical of Russian coverage of Jamala’s victory but all too
typical of the kind of Soviet-style reporting that the old anecdote made fun of
(vesti.ru/doc.html?id=2753661).
The Russian outlet begins by saying
that “viewers gave the victory to Russia, but first place was nonetheless left
to Ukraine,” the result of “new voting rules” in the Eurovision competition
which “permitted the organizers to correct the results according to their own
discretion,” an implicit suggestion that Russia was robbed.
“Vesti” continued with the observation
that “Internet users are actively commenting about this, and many of them aren’t
hiding their disappointment” that the Russian singer didn’t win and “calling
the results of Eurovision obviously politicized” and directed against Russia
and for Ukraine.
Jamala, who sang about the
deportation of the Crimean Tatars in 1944, an event other Russian outlets said
was not a punishment but a search for a better life (!), won, “Vesti” said, but
only “thanks to the vote by a professional jury.” If the people had been listened to, the
Russian would have won.
Now, “Vesti” notes, next year’s
Eurovision will take place in Ukraine because that is the country from which
this year’s winner came. But the Russian
outlet was not prepared to leave it at that.
It reported that someone at Jamala’s press conference wanted to know if
she would like to have Eurovision “in liberated Crimea,” a formulation only a
pro-Moscow speaker would use.
She responded that she “hopes that
Eurovision will be in Ukraine,” although she acknowledged that she “doesn’t
know where precisely.”
Then, “Vesti” reported, in a
transparent effort to politicize Eurovision still further, that in attendance when
Jamala sang her song about the deportation was Mustafa Dzhemilyev, himself a
victim of the deportation but whom “Vesti” described as “the leader of the unrecognized
mejlis who is being sought on a Russian warrant and who supported the energy
blockade of Crimea.”
And the Moscow outlet concluded: “After
the declaration of the Eurovision results, questions inevitably are arising:
how can a country which has a hole in its budget, a war in its east, and
regular disorders in its capital conduct such a competition?”
Those are useful questions but only
if they are addressed to Moscow which has a budget shortfall, has launched a
war, and regularly features ethnic clashes not only in the capital but elsewhere
around the country.
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