Staunton, July 22 -- The flood of news stories from a country as large, diverse
and strange as the Russian Federation often appears to be is far too large for
anyone to keep up with. But there needs to be a way to mark those which can’t
be discussed in detail but which are too indicative of broader developments to
ignore.
Consequently, Windows on Eurasia presents a selection of 13 of these
other and typically neglected stories at the end of each week. This is the 41st
such compilation. It is only suggestive and far from complete – indeed, once
again, one could have put out such a listing every day -- but perhaps one or
more of these stories will prove of broader interest.
1.
Doping Scandal
Emblematic of Putin System. As is invariably the case, the Putin regime and its
defenders have denied and then sought to limit the scope of the state-sponsored
doping system that the Kremlin leader put in place in order to win at Sochi and
elsewhere. But in reality, such behavior
is emblematic of Vladimir Putin’s approach to all things – engage in criminal
acts to advance his own agenda and then deny and obfuscate in order to avoid
being held responsible, according to Russian opposition leader Grigory
Yavlinsky (echo.msk.ru/blog/yavlinsky_g/1804494-echo/).
2. How Bad is the Russian Economy Doing? Even Some
Siloviki Are Out of Work. The Russian
economy is in increasingly dire straights. The real incomes of Russians have
fallen for the 20th month in a row (charter97.org/ru/news/2016/7/20/214386/), capital
flight is slowing only because there is so little easily exportable capital
left (ng.ru/economics/2016-07-20/4_ottok.html), and
Russians are cutting back on their
purchases in all spheres (newizv.ru/economics/2016-07-19/243122-rossijane-snizhajut-potrebitelskuju-aktivnost.html). But there are two more serious indicators of
how bad things are: Putin is going after the shadow or “garage” economy in the
hopes of finding more tax money (ulgrad.ru/?p=148306 https://slon.ru/posts/707433 and regnum.ru/news/economy/2158313.html) and some
siloviki, the last line of defense of the Putin system, are now losing their
jobs (ura.ru/articles/1036268425).
3.
Is Pokemon the Devil, a CIA Agent or Vladimir
Putin Himself? The Pokemon Go
craze has become the latest occasion for the manifestation of conspiracy
theories among Russians. Some see Pokemon as the devil (slamrf.ru/news/russia/rusnews/39880/), others
insist he is a CIA plot against Russia (rferl.mobi/a/russians-see-cia-plot-satanism-in-pokemon/27860783.html), and still
others say that Pokemon is Putin or Putin is Pokemon (forum-msk.org/material/society/12029215.html). One of the most interesting aspects of these
discussions is in the Russian Orthodox Church where some commentators have
suggested that the search for Pokemon will lead young Russians back into
churches where they can be evangelized (http://ria.ru/religion/20160719/1471255647.html).
4.
Russian Orthodox
Church Backs Ivan the Terrible Statue But Opposes One of Jesus Christ. In perhaps the clearest indication ever of
what the Moscow Patriarchate is about, its hierarchs say they approve plans to
put up a statue of Ivan the Terrible in Orel but are completely opposed to
putting up one of Jesus Christ in St. Petersburg (philologist.livejournal.com/8611153.html
and ria.ru/religion/20160711/1463628125.html). That
apparently paradoxical attitude is reflected in other things as well: the
church has eliminated references to the GULAG at its Solovetsky Islands museum
even though that is where the Soviet prison camp system got its start (novayagazeta.ru/society/73841.html),
and some commentators are complaining that the church has been covering up
research on the murder of the Imperial Family as well (interfax-religion.ru/?act=print&div=19637).
Meanwhile, anti-religious activists say more Russians would declare themselves
to be atheists if the state weren’t supporting the Orthodox church (.rosbalt.ru/russia/2016/07/13/1531674.html),
and a priest has declared that the Orthodox clergy now suffer from all the
shortcomings of Russian society, including an untrammeled desire to make money
(riafan.ru/420728-protoierey-georgiy-mitrofanov-molodezh-idet-v-svyashhenniki-radi-deneg).
5. Three Moves on the Nationalities Front. Chuvash activists want to set up permanent
representations abroad so that their republic can interact with other countries
(turkist.org/2016/07/chuvashia-permanent-mission.html).
(regnum.ru/news/polit/2158060.html).
Sakha residents says they want the president they elected in the 1990s to be
returned to office one way or another (regnum.ru/news/polit/2158060.html).
And Eurasianist Aleksandr Dugin proposes
cutting up Karelia in pieces to undercut the nationalist movement there (facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=207627249635384&set=a.126784477719662.1073741828.100011643312941&type=3&theater).
6.
When Even Siberia isn’t Far Enough Away. Russian officials first said that they
would send the recent FSB grads who blew their cover by being photographed at a
graduation ceremony that got out of hand to Siberia. But they decided that that
wasn’t far enough, and this week these officials indicated that the offending
officers will now spend their time in the farthest reaches of the Russian Far
East (svpressa.ru/society/news/152860/). But that may not be all bad, they could find,
as one survey suggests that the happiest village in Russia – on the Kamchatka
peninsula bordering the Pacific – is one of the happiest villages in the
country (csipn.ru/glavnaya/novosti-regionov/2591-selo-esso-na-kamchatke-priznano-samym-schastlivym-v-rossii#.V4ntqTV0e-d).
7.
Troubles on Russia’s
Railroads.
Russia’s rail lines have suffered from all kinds of problems. But there were
two new ones reported this past week: In the Urals region, commuters seized a
train in order to get to work (echo.msk.ru/blog/corruption/1804572-echo/
and on the Trans-Siberian, a woman was beheaded by a passing train as she and
her partner were having open-air sex (siberiantimes.com/other/others/news/n0676-woman-beheaded-as-she-has-sex-on-trans-siberian-railway-track/).
8.
The Chess Player
Vanishes … and Putin Gets Taller. In
Soviet times, as David King documented in his 1997 book, “The Commissar
Vanishes,” those political figures who got in trouble were whited out of
pictures on a regular basis. Now the Putin regime has extended this tactic to
others: it has now eliminated all references and pictures of opposition leader
and chess champion Gary Kasparov from a new book about Russian chess (philologist.livejournal.com/7703252.html). Russian photoshop experts are also turning
their efforts to make Putin look taller, adjusting pictures to make him look as
tall as the US secretary of state (facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=136555996775803&set=a.120763961688340.1073741828.100012642104829&type=3&theater).
And Moscow continues to manufacture fake pictures to try to suggest that
someone other than the Kremlin was responsible for the downing of the Malaysian
airliner (graniru.org/Politics/World/Europe/Ukraine/m.253120.html).
9.
What
Chinese-Russian Cooperation Really Looks Like – Beijing Builds Its Half of a
Bridge, Moscow Doesn’t. A perfect symbol of Chinese-Russian cooperation is
provided by a half-built bridge between the two countries. As a picture of the
site shows, China has finished its half of the bridge, but the Russians have
done nothing but create a tent city on the Russian side of the border (zloy-odessit.livejournal.com/1834438.html).
10.
Slouching toward Totalitarian
Democracy. Few Russians care about the Duma elections,
polls show, because they don’t think the outcome, which is probably already
known, matters (rbc.ru/politics/18/07/2016/578b806a9a79471dad8df69b?from=main), and incumbent
Duma deputies encourage this attitude saying that the main thing for Russians
is not the right to choose their leaders but to have their problems solved (regions.ru/news/2585518/). Meanwhile,
Russian commentators are pushing for a purely majoritarian approach to rule:
they say that Moscow should be concerned about the majority not the majority
and that the EU should change its approach to human rights by stop focusing on
the status of minorities and show more concern for the rights of majorities (svpressa.ru/politic/article/152456/
and regnum.ru/news/polit/2157478.html).
11.
Moscow Asks
Russians to Drop Facebook Accounts but Fewer than 5,000 Have. The Russian authorities have asked Russians
to cancel their Facebook accounts so that they will not be infected with any
ideas from that form of social media (joinfo.ua/sociaty/1104935_Pomoschnik-Putina-prizval-rossiyan-massovo-uyti.html), but so far
fewer than 5,000 have done so (exler.ru/blog/item/17476/).
12.
All
Russians are Equal but Some are More Equal than Others. When Russians were evacuated from Turkey
after the failed coup there, some stranded Russians reported that Russian
carriers had given preference to Muscovites over people from the regions,
something that will do nothing to make the residents of the capital, already
despised by many in what Muscovites call “the provinces” like them any better (ura.ru/news/1052255703).
13.
This Week’s Marie
Antoinette Moment: Russian Complains Terrorists in Nice Kept Her from Seeing
Fireworks. Competition
for the most outrageous thing a Russian has said in the past week keeps heating
up. This week’s winner is the wealthy Russian woman who was visiting Nice and
complained that the terrorist attack there had gotten in the way of her being
able to enjoy a fireworks display (life.ru/t/%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%BE%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B8/877734/kristina_sysoieva_o_tieraktie_v_nitstsie_zhal_chto_otmienili_fieiiervierki).
And six more from countries near Russia:
14. Putin Cult and Putin Problems Even More Obvious in
Crimea than in Chechnya. Billboards
and other advertisements of the Kremlin leader are even more prominent in
Russian-occupied Crimea than they are in Chechnya, journalists say (varlamov.ru/1836073.html). But so too
are the shortcomings of the Putin system: in Crimea now, some pensioners are
being given toilet paper in lieu of cash for their monthly stipends (qha.com.ua/ru/obschestvo/smi-v-krimu-okkupanti-viplachivayut-pensii-tualetnoi-bumagoi/162659/).
15.
Donbass Occupiers Haven’t Gained Support – In
Fact, They Appear to Be Losing It. At the start of the pro-Moscow invasion in 2014, just
under one in five of the residents of Ukraine’s Donbass supported the new
rulers. The share now is no greater and is likely less as reports come in of
residents protesting against the DNR and LNR powers that be (khpg.org/en/index.php?id=1468612172).
16.
Moscow Hopes to
Put Gagauz and Bulgarians in Play Inside Ukraine. Russian officials appear to be behind efforts
to mobilize the microscopically small Gagauz and Bulgarian minorities inside
Ukraine to put pressure on Kyiv to agree to give them and other territorial
autonomy, the latest example of Moscow’s attempt to use the principle of
national self-determination against a state that has achieved it for itself (politnavigator.net/chem-my-khuzhe-tatar-i-bolgar-ukrainskie-gagauzy-khotyat-ot-poroshenko-territorialnojj-avtonomii.html).
17.
Uzbekistan Losing Battle
Against Desertification. Water
shortages are leading to the spread of desert conditions over ever more of
Uzbekistan, something Tashkent now seems powerless to block let alone reverse (russian.eurasianet.org/node/63236).
18.
Kyrgyz Language at
Risk Because Dictionaries aren’t Keeping Up. Because Bishkek has not published
new dictionaries of the national language on a regular basis, experts say, the language
is becoming degraded as a result of the untrammeled entrance of various terms
from other languages (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1468829940).
19. Ukrainian Archives have Data on Two Million People
Soviets Persecuted. If the Ukrainian archives are completely
opened, that action almost certainly will spark a new wave of anti-Moscow
feeling given that there are files on two million Ukrainians who were subject
to repression by the Soviet regime (inforesist.org/o-chem-molchat-arhivyi-v-ukraine-hranitsya-2-mln-del-o-repressiyah-v-sssr/).
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