Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 13 – A majority of
Russians (59 percent) accept as true what state television tells them; but more
than three out of four (78 percent) believe that senior officials are “hiding
the truth” about the situation in Russia, and only 14 percent say they are
certain that everything these officials are saying is true, according to a new
Levada Center poll.
But according to the same poll,
Russians believe that television gives “more objective information” about
foreign affairs, where they have fewer opportunities for directknowledge, even
if far fewer believe what it says about domestic conditions (27 percent) and
“’the life of simple Russians and society’” (25 percent) (kommersant.ru/doc/3060925).
As reported by “Kommersant,” the
survey found that Russians distrust what senior officials say about domestic
conditions. Thirty-six percent say that these officials “’sometimes speak the
truth’ but sometimes conceal it.” Thirty
percent say senior officials mostly lie, and 12 percent say they “always”
conceal the truth.
For Vladimir Putin and the
authorities, such attitudes are not that important, sociologists say. In fact,
one Grigory Dobromelov told the Moscow newspaper that “the low level of trust
to the words of bureaucrats could be ‘a projection of the old formula ‘the tsar
is good but the boyars are bad.
But distrust in some officials may
spread to others and that constitutes a potential if not immediate problem for
the Kremlin. The poll found that 42 percent of Russians are themselves honest
in their statements about Putin. Thirty-two percent say that only about half of
their fellow citizens tell the truth about that.
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