Staunton, August 19 -- 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 45th
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. Putsch? What Putsch?
Approximately half of Russians say they don’t remember the August 1991
putsch that accelerated the disintegration of the USSR, either because they
were too young – anyone under 35 is unlikely to have memories of it – or because
they have not been encouraged to pay attention (newsru.com/russia/15aug2016/coup.html). The Moscow
city government first banned – for the first time ever – and then allowed a
march on this anniversary – but ordered that it involve 100 people or fewer (graniru.org/Politics/Russia/activism/m.253872.html).
Like its Soviet predecessor, the Putin regime seems to believe in the principle
of no person, no problem: there is now pressure to end the use of petitions
which after all reflect popular attitudes (club-rf.ru/78/news/42910).
2. Have More Children Even If It makes You Poor, Orthodox
Church Tells Russian Women. With only
immigration keeping the Russian population from falling (izvestia.ru/news/627869) and with
non-Russians filling ever more slots in elite Moscow universities (by24.org/2016/08/14/people_from_caucasus_are_moscow_students_now/),
the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church has called on
ethnic Russian women to have as many children as possible even if that will
drive them into poverty (politsovet.ru/52745-rpc-sovetuet-mnogodetnym-semyam-smiritsya-s-bednostyu.html). But some state agencies haven’t gotten the
message: a woman who worked as a Putin troll got pregnant and lost her job. She
is now suing to recover it (newizv.ru/society/2016-08-18/245038-beremennaja-sotrudnica-vybroshennaja-s-fabriki-trollej-podala-isk-v-sud.html).
3.
Global Warming Reducing Russia’s Size Bit by
Bit. Global warming is leading both
to rising sea levels in the Arctic and the erosion of land in Russia’s north,
both of which are reducing a few acres every day the size of Russia’s territory
(siberiantimes.com/ecology/casestudy/news/n0704-arctics-climate-on-a-cliff-edge/).
4.
Medvedev’s Crack
Backfires: Russian Teachers Turning to Politics, Not Business. Earlier this
month, Dmitry Medvedev told teachers unhappy about their incomes to go into
business, but some of them are taking a new direction: they are going into
politics to press their demands (ng.ru/economics/2016-08-19/1_teachers.html). Given the power of teachers’ unions
elsewhere, this may be an important trend.
It may also serve notice on the Russian prime minister to be more
careful in his remarks. That seems unlikely: this week he told regional
officials that he didn’t want to listen to them complaining about their
problems (mk.ru/politics/2016/08/17/prosba-ne-rasskazyvat-o-trudnostyakh-medvedev-vydal-novuyu-gromkuyu-citatu.html).
5.
Russian Standard
of Living Now Back to 1989 Levels.
After rising in the first decade of this century to 15 percent more than
at the end of Soviet times, the real standard of living Russians now have has
fallen back 15 percent over the last three years and now stands just where it
did in 1989, according to Russian economists (ttolk.ru/2016/08/18/уровень-жизни-россиян-вернулся-к-1989-год/).
Other bad economic news this week included reports that Russia is permanently
losing millions of jobs (ng.ru/economics/2016-08-16/1_job.html), that the decline
in industrial production has resumed and even accelerated (slon.ru/posts/72059), that the elections
may accelerate the country’s economic collapse (rufabula.com/author/alina-vituhnovskaya/1306),
and that ever fewer Russians are applying for passports to travel abroad (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=57B5634A718F6).
Of course, this last may have another explanation: Russians may not want to
attract attention to their desire to leave Russia today.
6.
Kim Jong Il Gets
Plaque in Petersburg as Russia’s Statue Wars Continue. Russian officials
have erected a plaque in honor of former North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il,
someone whose “effective management” style probably pleases current Kremlin
leader Vladimir Putin (themoscowtimes.com/news/memorial-plaque-honoring-north-korean-leader-unveiled-in-russias-st-petersburg-54975). Meanwhile, fights over statues honoring
others continue. A majority of Oryol residents say they want a statue of Ivan
the Terrible who among other things was founder of their city (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2016/08/16/lukavye_somnenya_proch/).
Many Russians are upset about the Mannerheim plaque (regnum.ru/news/society/2168300.html) and say
they are worried about discussions concerning the erection of a monument to
Admiral Kolchak, the leader of the anti-Bolshevik movement in Siberia (forum-msk.org/material/news/12119884.html).
One piece of positive news on this front: the first tablets marking the last
residences of people arrested by Stalin have gone up in Yekaterinburg (sobkorr.ru/news/57AC5C3912BF4.html).
7.
German Journalist
Says Potholes in Russian Roads Reduce Highway Deaths There. A German journalist has praised one of the
things that most Russians condemn: the horrific state of Russian roads. He says
that the potholes that mar most of the highways there are good things because
they force drivers to go more slowly and thus reduce the number of traffic
deaths (vesti.ru/doc.html?id=2787497&cid=520).
Meanwhile, Moscow has announced plans to increase the length of toll roads in
Russia from 500 kilometers now to 2,000 by 2020. No word on whether these will
be pothole free and thus more dangerous, however (1prime.ru/mainnews/20160813/826370075.html).
8.
Russian Dress
Codes for Officials, Muslims, and Art. Given the heatwave
in Russia, many people are coming to work with lighter clothes than usual. That
has offended some officials and they have ordered people to avoid wearing
anything too revealing (ura.ru/news/1052258628). Meanwhile, other officials have said that
they will not tolerate any burkinis, the swimwear favored by traditional Muslim
women (kavpolit.com/articles/putevki_vsem_no_nikakih_burkini-27529/),
and a Russian court has ordered the use of a Hieronymus Bosch painting as
advertising for an art exhibit to be taken down lest it corrupt Russian youth (avmalgin.livejournal.com/6404635.html).
9.
Matvienko Wants
All Laws Checked for Conformity with Russian National Values. Federation
Council head Valentina Matvienko wants to set up a special commission that will
ensure that all legislation conforms to Russian national values (nazaccent.ru/content/21576-matvienko-nado-proveryat-zakony-na-sootvetstvie.html).
One of those values apparently is not democracy: Two-thirds of Russians say
they are prepared to sacrifice that if needed for the struggle with extremism
and terrorism (finanz.ru/novosti/aktsii/dve-treti-rossiyan-gotovy-otkazatsya-ot-demokratii-1001353802).
10.
For Kremlin,
Islamophobia is the Anti-Semitism of Today.
According to one Moscow commentator, for the Putin regime, Islamophobia
is the anti-Semitism of today, a set of attitudes that both reflects their real
feelings and something that they are quite prepared to make use of against
others (ej.ru/?a=note&id=30043).
Such an instrumental approach to extremist prejudices has some interesting
consequences. One includes the possibility of vacating charges of extremism
against someone who declares that he is ready to serve in the interior ministry
(nazaccent.ru/content/21581-s-zhelavshego-sluzhit-v-tverskom-mvd.html).
11.
Yekaterinburg
Resident Wants Government to Refund Taxes Used for Crimean Annexation. A man in Yekaterinburg
is demanding that the Russian finance ministry return to him the share of his
taxes that were used for the Crimean Anschluss, yet another indication of the
ways in which Russians are showing their resentment of Putin’s Ukrainian
policies (znak.com/2016-08-10/ekaterinburzhec_potreboval_u_minfina_rf_vernut_emu_nalogi_potrachennye_na_krym). Another case
of this concerns people living along the roads leading to the Kerch bridge now
under construciton who say they will block the highways unless they are
compensated (primechaniya.ru/home/news/avgust_20161/kerchane_grozyat_perekryvat_dorogi_k_krymskomu_mostu/?from=fb).
12.
Stavropol Cossacks
Given New Job: Fight Pokemon! The authorities are always looking for
things that the Cossacks can do and the Cossacks are typically quite willing to
oblige. Now, in Stavropol, the two have come together and decided that the Cossacks
there will fight with Pokemon and with the Pokemon craze sweeping across Russia
(nazaccent.ru/content/21617-stavropolskie-kazaki-sobralis-borotsya-s-pokemonami.html).
13.
For Residents of
Kaliningrad, It is Still ‘Koenig.’
Just as residents of Leningrad often referred to it as “Peter” in Soviet
times before its historical name was
restored, so too residents of Kaliningrad refer to their homeland as “Koenig,”
an abbreviation for “Koenigsberg” as Germany’s East Prussia was known before
Stalin annexed the territory at the end of World War II (newsland.com/user/4296630353/content/izolirovannaia-chast-rossii/5393144).
And six more from countries near Russia:
1.
Drones Said
Carrying Contraband from Belarus to Lithuania. Smugglers are going high-tech to
get goods across the Belarusian-Lithuanian border: they are now using drones,
Lithuanian officials say (charter97.org/ru/news/2016/8/13/218185/).
2. Infant Mortality Up in Crimea Since Russian Anschluss. Infant mortality
is one of the most sensitive measures of how a society deals with its most
defenseless. Since Russia occupied Crimea, deaths among newborns have shot up (rosbalt.ru/russia/2016/08/14/1540762.html).
3.
Autonomy for Crimea Not About Federalization
of Ukraine, Crimean Tatars Say. Some Ukrainians have objected to giving autonomy to the
Crimean Tatars lest that trigger the federalization of Ukraine that Moscow
wants. But Crimean Tatar leaders are
pointing out that giving them autonomy in fact would be a defense against such
federalization because it would be based on nationality rather than regional
autonomy (turkist.org/2016/08/ukraine-crimean-tatars-autonomy.html).
4. Graffiti a Cheap Way to De-Communize. Ukrainians have
found a quick and inexpensive way to live up to the de-communization program.
Instead of tearing down all statues of Lenin, they are simply drawing Ukrainian-style
moustaches on Lenin (aktsent.com.ua/novini/1404-na-sumshchyne-oryhynalno-dekommunyzyrovaly-lenyna.html).
5.
Turkmenistan Wants to Be a Naval Power on the
Caspian. For most of the last 25 years, Ashgabat has
largely ignored the need to have a naval presence on the Caspian. But now it is
engaged in a massive naval construction program that will allow it to defend
its territorial waters and pipelines against challenges from other navies on
that body of water (islamsng.com/tkm/news/11128).
6.
Baku Bans
Mini-Skirts and Speaking Russian in Certain Places. Although the president of Kyrgyzstan recently
suggested that it is better for young Muslim women to wear mini-skirts than
bombs, the government of Azerbaijan is taking no chances and is banning short
dresses in certain institutions (baku.ws/79787-zapret-na-mini-yubki-v-azerbaydzhane.html). Intriguingly, given the warming of relations
between Russia and Azerbaijan, the new rector of Baku State University has
banned the use of Russian for certain campus functions (baku.ws/79896-novyy-rektor-bsu-zapretila-govorit-v-universitete-na-russkom-yazyke.html).
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