Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 3 -- 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 69th
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.
Putinists have Sent
Abroad More than Half What Russia Earned from Selling Oil and Gas. In the 17 years
since Vladimir Putin came to power, Russia has received some 2.5 trillion US
dollars from the sale of oil and gas abroad more than enough to develop the
country and address its many needs. But the Kremlin leader and his cronies sent
more than half of that abroad so as to enrich themselves rather than invest it
on Russia (saleksashenko.com/2017/01/blog-post_31.html).
That is just part of what must be
included in any balance sheet of his rule. Other parts are harder to
monetarize, but the invasion of other countries, the suppression of democracy
and various freedoms and his encouragement of some of the worst aspects of
Russians must also be included on any such assessment (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5891DEDBAE794).
2.
Trump Gets Even
More Russian Media Mentions than Putin Last Month. According to a
new statistical analysis, the Russian media mentioned Donald Trump even more
often than it did Vladimir Putin during January (themoscowtimes.com/news/trump-overtakes-putin-as-russias-most-discussed-celebrity-57007). And with the mentions has come a wave of
Trumpomania, perhaps the most extreme form being the decision of a Sochi
resident to have profiles of Trump and Putin engraved on his teeth (meduza.io/shapito/2017/01/30/zhitel-sochi-vygraviroval-sebe-na-zubah-portrety-putina-i-trampa).
3.
As Economic Crisis
Deepens, Some Say Cannibalism Might have to be Legalized. With the deepening
of the economic crisis in Russia, the purchasing power of ordinary Russians
declining, and shortages of basic foods like rice being reported, some Russians
speculate that the country might have to legalize cannibalism so that the
population would have enough to eat (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=588F5C9151D11
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=588EF81E3B548). Among the flood of bad news about the Russian
economy this week were the following stories: One in every five Russian firms
isn’t making investments because of the sanctions regime (republic.ru/posts/79083). Russians
may soon be fined if they are discovered hoarding Moscow-sanctioned items (checheninfo.ru/118920-grazhdan-rossii-mogut-shtrafovat-za-hranenie-sankcionki.html).
The real pay of Russian doctors is 60 percent less than Rosstat says (newsland.com/community/4765/content/realnaia-zarplata-rossiiskikh-medikov-okazalas-na-60-menshe-ofitsialnoi/5663611) as wave of closures of hospitals continues (ura.ru/news/1052275743) and price of
medicine continue to go up (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=589081EA7D4AD).
Inmates in Russia’s strict regime camps must feed themselves or starve (ng.ru/style/2017-01-31/12_6916_kroliki.html).
Rice shortages are spreading through the country (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=589176BF88F27).
Moscow deploys university students to work on Kerch bridge as the price for that
megaproject continues to soar (yug.svpressa.ru/economy/article/144050/
and profile.ru/obsch/item/114972-udarnaya-studencheskaya). And Russia falls even further behind
on the Big Mac index (snob.ru/selected/entry/120049). But despite this, the Kremlin said it would
not cut military spending to help the population deal with its problems (themoscowtimes.com/news/kremlin-refuses-to-cut-russian-defense-budget-57000).
Not all the economic news was bad, especially in the defense sector and for the
rich. Bloomberg says the Russian economy did slightly better than reported
earlier because of a new accounting method that includes outyear plans for
defense spending (republic.ru/posts/79269),
new ways for laundering money to send abroad have come into play (kommersant.ru/doc/3208167), and
Moscow is offering special tours to the North Pole on its nuclear-powered icebreaker
over the next two years. The cost? Just under 28,000 US dollars per person, far
beyond the reach of most Russians or others as well (thebarentsobserver.com/en/arctic/2017/01/rosatomflot-steps-north-pole-nuclear-cruises).
4.
Non-Russians Don’t
Share Russian View that Beating is a Sign of Love. As Moscow’s new
law eliminating criminal punishments for violence within families is set to go
into force and the country’s largest newspaper tells its readers that women
should welcome beatings because those who are beaten are more likely to give
birth to sons (themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-newspaper-tells-battered-women-to-cheer-up-because-abuse-increases-odds-of-having-sons-57028),
a survey among Russia’s northern peoples finds that few of them share the
widespread belief among Russians that beatings are a sign of love (nazaccent.ru/content/23018-bet-znachit.html).
But that was just one of the developments in Russian society this past week
worthy of note. Others include: the rapid spread of protests east of the Urals
about communal service price hikes (tayga.info/132361
and afterempire.info/2017/01/27/gendarme/), a proposed law on missionary activity that will
make any religious assembly of three or more a potential crime (portal-credo.ru/site/?act=authority&id=2241), a report about how Moscow now has “standardized”
how Russians are to express their grief over tragedies (znak.com/2017-01-27/beslana_zhurnalist_elena_kostyuchenko_o_materyah_beslana_i_standartizacii_skorbi_gosudarstvom), Russia’s most highly rated university is one the
authorities stripped of its license (ixtc.org/2017/01/liderom-reytinga-vuzov-stal-universitet-lishivshiysya-litsenzii-posle-donosa-deputata-milonova/),
the beating by police of a woman who investigates torture in places of
confinement (ixtc.org/2017/02/v-lyubertsah-politseyskie-izbili-advokatov-proekta-territoriya-pytok/#more-12873), Freedom House’s conclusion that Russia now leads
in attacking basic human rights (rufabula.com/news/2017/01/31/freedoms),
and a decision to bring in priests to bless a road against accidents after the
authorities announced they had no plans to fix its dangerous potholes (sobkorr.ru/news/58933F8CBDEBD.html).
5.
Moscow Metro
Wanted Aleksandr Nevsky but ‘Like Always’ Got Darth Vader Instead. Russia’s
monument wars continued the past week, with some conflicts intensifying and
other unexpected developments emerging. Perhaps the most amusing of the latter
was a decision to put up pictures of Aleksandr Nevsky in the Moscow metro, a
project that came crashing down when the pictures put up resembled Darth Vader
of Star Wars’ Evil Empire than the Russian prince who allied with the Mongols
against the Teutonic knights (meduza.io/shapito/2017/02/01/v-moskovskom-metro-povesili-portret-aleksandra-nevskogo-no-poluchilsya-dart-veyder).
Some other flashpoints in this war in no particular order included: Black
Hundreds-style rhetoric increasingly surfaced among Russian Orthodox activists
who want St. Isaac’s cathedral back and who say they will burn theaters which
show a film they don’t approve of (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5892E9BC63CAA),
residents of the nuclear city Obninsk object to plans for building a church
there in honor of Russia’s nuclear weapons program (regnum.ru/news/society/2234063.html),
Moscow officials work tirelessly but ineffectively to remove flowers from site
of the murder of Boris Nemtsov (themoscowtimes.com/news/moscows-fruitless-but-efficient-efforts-to-erase-the-nemtsov-memorial-grind-on-57015), Roman Catholics and Old Believers say they are
inspired by the success of getting Russian Orthodox churches back and plan to
launch their own campaigns for the churches seized from their communities in
Soviet times (ng.ru/ng_religii/2017-02-01/14_414_obshina.html),
activists denounced the Yeltsin Center as “a neopaganist shrine” and demanded
it be closed as such (regnum.ru/news/cultura/2232498.html), Izhevsk officials said they were worried
Moscow would not deliver to them the 21 billion rubles it had promised for the
jubilee of the creator of the Kalashnikov rifle (newsland.com/community/politic/content/izhevsk-boitsia-ne-poluchit-21-mlrd-rub-na-100-letnii-iubilei-kalashnikova/5664080),
Moscow will erect a memorial to those who died in the recent crash of a
military plane over the Black Sea and also name a square for Fidel Castro (http://echo.msk.ru/news/1919322-echo.html
and meduza.io/news/2017/01/30/imenem-fidelya-kastro-nazovut-ploschad-v-moskve),
and Volgograd as it does every year according to a Putin law became Stalingrad
for a day on the anniversary of the World War II battle there (stoletie.ru/na_pervuiu_polosu/segodna__godovshhina_stalingradskoj_bitvy_701.htm).
But other evidence of Stalin’s more continuing return to Russian life included the
discovery that the ombudsman responsible for children’s welfare in Yaroslavl
has a picture of Stalin with a child (znak.com/2017-02-03/v_ofise_yaroslavskogo_detskogo_ombudsmena_visit_portret_stalina).
6.
Russian Hackers
Seek Release Files Intended to Discredit IOC Anti-Doping Investigation. Hackers who have
been linked to Moscow have leaked documents that seek to present the IOC
investigation into the doping scandal as a political witch hunt (ria.ru/sport/20170203/1487097929.html and ura.ru/news/1052276257).
But more evidence of widespread use of permanence enhancing drugs by Russian
athletes continue to surface (lenta.ru/news/2017/02/02/povetkinbagain/).
Meanwhile, 24 Russian athletes who have been stripped of their medals are
ignoring demands they return them (themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-olympians-disqualified-for-doping-havent-returned-their-medals-says-sports-chief-57003), even apparently when Russian sports authorities have
acknowledged that there were violations and stripped a Russian athlete of a
medal, an action apparently intended to curry favor with the West or at least sow confusion (regnum.ru/news/sport/2233043.html).
Russia will not take part in the 2018 Para-Olympics (polit.ru/article/2017/02/01/paralymp/),
but the push to strip Russia of the World Cup appears to be easing at least in
the US in the wake of Donald Trump’s election and shift on Russia (usatoday.com/story/sports/columnist/brennan/2017/01/30/us-figure-skating-walks-back-comments-russia/97260474/). And that is happening despite growing
evidence that Moscow will not have put the infrastructure in place that it
promised as part of its agreement with FIFA to host that competition (meduza.io/feature/2017/02/01/platnuyu-trassu-ot-moskvy-do-peterburga-ne-postroyat-k-chempionatu-mira-po-futbolu).
7.
Russia’s Jews,
Feeling the Chill of Anti-Semitism, Leaving for Israel. Duma deputy
speaker Petr Tolstoy’s remark about the role of Jews in seizing and destroying
Russian churches a century ago has been condemned by many, but it has opened
the floodgates for others who want to go back to blaming Jews for all their
problems (ixtc.org/2017/01/leonid-gozman-kto-vypil-vodu-iz-krana-ubil-tsarya-i-spoil-russkiy-narod/#more-12839). Russia’s
relatively few remaining Jews, feeling the chill of anti-Semitism, are moving
as rapidly as possible to Israel and now outnumber Jews from any other country
about repatriants to that country (newsland.com/community/6224/content/rossiia-vyshla-na-pervoe-mesto-po-kolichestvu-rep
atriiruiushchikhsia-v-izrail/5662883).
8.
Is There a Muslim
Maidan in Moscow’s Future? Mufti Ravil Gainutdin, head of the Council of Muftis
of Russia, says that widespread Russian discrimination against Muslims may
force the latter consider organizing a Maidan in Russia in order to defend
their rights (islamio.ru/news/society/sovet_muftiev_rossii_zovet_na_maydan_gonimykh_musulman/).
That Russia has repressed and even killed numerous Muslims in recent years has
been documented by the Golos Islam portal (golosislama.com/news.php?id=31080), and that Russians dislike Muslims more than almost
any other European country has also been documented (snob.ru/selected/entry/119965).
But on that point, there are some interesting nuances: Russians don’t like
Muslims but they are less opposed to the wearing of the hijab than are many
others (idelreal.org/a/28269474.html),
and they are less inclined to be hostile to members of Muslim nationalities
than they were a decade ago precisely
because they are more fearful of conflicts arising abroad (regnum.ru/news/society/2232518.html
and http://nazaccent.ru/content/23025-rossiyane-stali-menshe-boyatsya-mezhnacionalnyh-konfliktov.html).
9.
Russians
Fall for New Game that Encourages Them to Be Snitches Like Pavlik Morozov. One of the most noxious heroes of Soviet
times was the boy Pavlik Morozov who was killed by relatives for turning in his
parents to the authorities. Now, he is making a comeback as a hero in Russia (ufa.kp.ru/daily/26636.7/3655146/),
and the idea that turning people in to the authorities is a good thing for
Russians to do is being encouraged not only by new laws but by a newly-popular computer
game (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/01/29/71323-sygrat-v-stukacha).
10.
Russians Worrying
about Baby Boom – in China. The effective end of the one-child policy in China
has led to a baby boom in that country, and some Russians are now worried that
this demographic development will lead Beijing to look northward to the
underpopulated areas of the Russian Federation east of the Urals, given that
Russia is definitely not experiencing a baby boom of its own (republic.ru/posts/79008).
11. FSB Interfered with Nobel Committee to Prevent Peace
Prize from Going to Poroshenko.
The Russian government was sufficiently concerned that the Nobel Peace
Prize might be awarded to Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko that it launched
an active measure campaign via the FSB to prevent that from happening,
according to Scandinavian investigators (graniru.org/Politics/World/Europe/m.258357.html).
12.
Most Russian
Siloviki and Officials are Imperial Chauvinists, Kurbanov Says. Ruslan Kurbanov,
a specialist on the Caucasus at the Moscow Institute of Oriental Studies, says
that “a significant fraction” of Russia’s siloviki and other officials “are
infected with imperial chauvinism” and that this limits their effectiveness (onkavkaz.com/news/1504-ruslan-kurbanov-znachitelnaja-chast-silovikov-i-chinovnikov-rf-porazhena-imperskim-shovinizmom.html).
13. This Week’s Good Russian: Aeroflot Pilot Saves
Deportee from Certain Death. A pilot for
Aeroflot having been told that there was a man on his flight who was being
deported to a Middle Eastern country where he almost certainly would be killed
stopped the plane and allowed the man to get off and flee in order to avoid
that outcome (themoscowtimes.com/news/pilot-stops-flight-to-allow-deported-refugees-to-return-to-russia-56958).
And six more from countries neighboring
Russia:
1.
Extremist
Materials on Kazakh Web Growing ‘Exponentially.’ Kazakh officials are extremely worried by
what they say is the “exponential” growth of extremist materials of all kinds
on the internet in Kazakhstan in both Kazakh and Russian (e-islam.kz/ru/songy-janalyktar/item/12473-knb-kolichestvo-ekstremistskikh-materialov-v-seti-internet-rastet-s-geometricheskoj-progressiej).
2.
Kazakhs Living in
Tajikistan Forgetting Their Native Language.
The Russian language is not the only threat to non-Russian languages,
experts say. Other non-Russian ones can be a threat as well if members of one
group living in a place dominated by speakers of another lose their native
tongue. That is now happening, Astana
says, with some ethnic Kazakhs who live in Tajikistan (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1485847920).
3.
Crimean Tatars
Experience Ethnic Hatred Eight Times More than Minorities in Russia. According to a new survey conducted for the
Russian Federal Agency for Nationality Affairs, Crimean Tatars in
Russian-occupied Crimea are nearly eight times more likely to say they have
suffered from discrimination and the hostility of other groups than are ethnic
minorities in the Russian Federation, with 38 percent making such declarations
compared to five percent by the other ethnic communities (nazaccent.ru/content/23014-glava-fadn-93-rossiyan-ne-stalkivalis.html).
4.
Moscow
Now Recognizes LNR and DNR Passports as Travel Documents. Even though this step
violates international law and opens Aeroflot and other carriers to possible
sanctions, Moscow has decided to recognize the passports issued by its
sponsored territorial entities within Ukraine the so-called “Luhansk Peoples
Republic” and the “Donetsk Peoples Republic” as travel documents that Russian
officials and firms will accept as travel documents equivalent to the passports
of actual countries (rbc.ru/politics/02/02/2017/587cf9159a7947e5f86ee045).
5. Lukashenka Says ‘Fraternal Ukraine’ Fighting for Its Independence. In dramatic
fashion, Belarusian leader Alyaksandr Lukashenka has positioned himself in opposition to Moscow by declaring that “fraternal
Ukraine” is fighting for its independence, a statement that is far tougher than
those made by many Western governments concerning the new upsurge in fighting.
Indeed, the US Department of State in its initial statement didn’t mention
Russia by name in its condemnation of the fighting at Avdiivka (themoscowtimes.com/news/brother-ukraine-is-fighting-for-its-independence-lukashenko-56954 and gordonua.com/news/war/v-zayavlenii-gosdepartamenta-ssha-po-situacii-v-avdeevke-ne-upominalas-rossiya-the-guardian-172159.htm).
6.
Moscow Lies When
It Says It Invented Belarusian Language in 1926, Minsk Scholar Says. Russian officials
who present “alternative facts” about Belarus and the Belarusian language are
simply lying, a Minsk historian says, noting that the idea that Moscow “invented”
both in 1926 is contradicted by all available information about Belarusian
history (nn.by/?c=ar&i=184632&lang=ru).
No comments:
Post a Comment