Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 11 -- 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 73rd
such compilation. It is “a double” because I missed last week due to illness. It
is only suggestive and far from complete but perhaps one or more of these
stories will prove of broader interest.
1.
‘Putin is War;
Putin is Death.’
Russian support for Vladimir Putin may not be quite as universal as assumed if
a banner put up and then immediately taken down in Moscow is any guide (echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/1939098-echo/).
Moreover, as those in the Kremlin plot about the president’s re-election,
commentators are pointing out that the 2018 Russian presidential election will
be “no less intriguing than those in Azerbaijan and Zimbabwe,” hardly the
reaction Putin might like to have (profile.ru/politika/item/115516-vpered-rukami).
Two other pieces of Putin news: the Russian president had to redefine the borders
of Europe in order to claim, otherwise falsely, that infant mortality in Russia
is now lower than in most European countries (znak.com/2017-03-08/putin_zayavil_chto_mladencheskaya_smertnost_v_rossii_nizhe_chem_v_evrope_u_voz_drugie_dannye),
and Russian officials have announced that under Putin, there is one real growth
industry: the criminal code which has been adding 25 pages a year under Putin’s
presidency (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58C04E2EB2150).
2. Kazan Residents Appeal to ‘Comrade Trump’ While Others
Say He is ‘the American Stalin.’ A
group of residents in Tatarstan’s capital have called on “Comrade Trump” to
come to their aid (idelreal.org/a/28333386.html). Meanwhile, a Russian nationalist portal has
described the US president as “the American Stalin.” It isn’t clear whether they
mean that in a positive or negative way given Russian feelings about the Soviet
dictator (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/03/03/tramp_eto_amerikanskij_stalin/).
Meanwhile, officials in Kaluga oblast have concluded that Trump is genetically
related to the population there (newsland.com/community/7451/content/u-trampa-nashlis-rodstvenniki-v-kaluge/5722391).
3.
A Medvedev Russia
Would Be as Bad or Worse than Putin’s, Analyst Says. While Prime
Minister Dmitry Medvedev continues to enjoy a more positive reputation in the
West than Putin does, an increasing number of Russians offended by his corrupt
behavior and by his tendency to say there is “no” money, work or anything else
people want have concluded that their country would be no better off under him
than they are under Putin (newsland.com/community/5862/content/v-kakoi-parallelnoi-vselennoi-on-obitaet/5712279
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58BCF09DDB866).
There have even begun to appear signs at demonstrations calling for Medvedev to
leave office (graniru.org/Politics/Russia/activism/m.259300.html).
4.
Two Things
Motivate Russians: Their Pay and the Possible Loss of Their Jobs. According to Dmitry Potapenko, only two things
motivate Russians today: their salaries and the fear of losing their jobs (newsland.com/community/4765/content/dmitrii-potapenko-liudei-motiviruiut-2-veshchi-na-30-zarplata-na-70-strakh-ee-poteriat/5722762).
The second fear is more than twice as widespread as the former and so Russian
officials seek to hide unemployment by cutting back hours and wages rather than
firing anyone (newsland.com/community/politic/content/treshchina-v-vaze/5712367).
According to Moscow experts, Russians are less sensitive to the decline in
their national economy because they now have so little money that they
increasingly exist outside of the formal economic structures. In any case, they
have no sense of the reality that Russian GDP is falling rapidly relative to
the GDPs of other countries (forum-msk.org/material/news/12879909.html). Other bad
economic news over the last ten days included: the return of obligatory
population loans to the state (nakanune.ru/news/2017/2/27/22462149/),
an acknowledgement that any money coming into Russia now is speculative rather
than investment (svpressa.ru/economy/article/167105/),
a realization that 40 percent of Russian professions are going to see a
contraction in the number employed in the coming decade because of computerization
(regnum.ru/news/economy/2242996.html),
and the growth of indebtedness of Russian cities and regions to almost three
trillion rubles (50 billion US dollars) with little prospect that any of these
money can be repaid (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58B9366CF0260).
5.
Putin Puts Health
Care Beyond the Reach of Russians Financially and Geographically. Vladimir Putin’s
health optimization effort, a euphemism for massive closures, means that many
Russians now cannot afford health care and that those who can often must travel
hundreds of kilometers to get it, often dying on the way (rusmonitor.com/v-rossii-vrachi-poluchayut-menshe-chem-v-kenii-vy-udivleny.html
and forum-msk.org/material/economic/12866052.html).
Other bad social news over the last two weeks includes: trash is now forming a
ring around major cities creating a health disaster for the future (svpressa.ru/society/article/167824/),
Russians cut spending in retail stores by 3.7 percent last month over the month
before (rosbalt.ru/russia/2017/03/09/1597262.html),
cutbacks in higher educational institutions mean that many Russians who want to
enroll won’t be able to (stoletie.ru/obschestvo/obrazovanije__ne_dla_bednyh_145.htm),
the heat was turned off at a defense plant because the company hadn’t paid its
electric bill (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58C114A16DC5C),
only two of Russia’s cities now have tap water that is safe to drink (mk.ru/social/2017/03/09/voda-izpod-krana-priznana-godnoy-tolko-v-dvukh-rossiyskikh-gorodakh.html),
more than half of all Russian foods are adulterated, including high-end items like
caviar (newsland.com/community/129/content/kolbasa-i-syr-biut-rekordy-po-obiomu-surrogata-v-rossii/5718631
and svpressa.ru/economy/article/167794/),
and finally and most horrifically, Russia has been identified as a country
where those who commit rape are most likely to be able to escape any punishment
for their crime (snob.ru/selected/entry/121379).
6.
Monuments War
Continues Unabated. This week, officials claimed that a statue of
Lenin and a statue of Nicholas II had wept, something that some Russians saw as
a divine sign and that others dismissed as a political ploy (gazeta.ru/social/news/2017/03/05/n_9758909.shtml
and echo.msk.ru/blog/day_video/1938396-echo/). But those were far from the only engagements in
the Russian “monuments war.” Among the others: Russian officials say that
Soviet and tsarist films can’t be extremist by definition (politsovet.ru/54615-pravitelstvo-predlozhilo-ne-iskat-ekstremizm-v-sovetskih-filmah.html
although some local officials disagree and are pursuing cases against those who
commemorate the White Russian movement (/afterempire.info/2017/03/03/antirussia/),
supporters of the canonization of Rasputin continued their campaign (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/03/02/sozdana_narodnaya_komissiya_po_obwestvennoj_reabilitacii_grigoriya_efimovicha_rasputinanovogo_i_sboru_svidetelstv_o_ego_blagodat/), the Roman Catholic Church announced that it will
follow the Moscow Patriarchate and Muslim groups and seek its property back from the Russian state as well
(openrussia.org/notes/706923/),
a group of liberal activists have called for renaming Sheremetyevo airport in
honor of Mikhail Gorbachev (newsland.com/community/politic/content/liberaly-predlozhili-nazvat-imenem-gorbachiova-aeroport-sheremetevo/5714331),
the KPRF has launched a campaign to fight desecration of Stalin monuments and
bans on memorializing the Soviet dictator (twitter.com/EnglishRussia1/status/838303757049937920
and newsland.com/community/4109/content/kprf-potrebovala-proverit-zakonnost-zapreta-na-uvekovechivanie-pamiati-stalina/5702924),
the fight over renaming Ingushetia Alania continues despite official promises
that it won’t happen (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/298550/),
and the memorial to Boris Nemtsov was again destroyed immediately after a march
in his honor (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58BD051015FBA). Meanwhile, to the horror of some, a perfectly
Putinist memorial has been erected in Chechnya, with no names or other
indications of just what it is for (echo.msk.ru/blog/schlosberg_lev/1941222-echo/).
7.
Unlike Rest of World,
Russia Doesn’t Have a Zero Tolerance Policy on Doping. Russian experts
point out that there is a major divide between Russian sports officials and
those in other countries. Everyone else has a zero-tolerance policy; Russia
doesn’t and seeks to work with athletes who have taken drugs rather than just exclude
them, something that reflects the longstanding existence of a state doping
program and also yet another way for Moscow to muddy the waters in the current
doping scandal (polit.ru/article/2017/03/08/dope/).
In any case, Russia has not been invited to take part in an anti-doping meeting
in Washington on March 22 (vedomosti.ru/politics/news/2017/03/10/680621-rossiya-antiigilovskoi-koalitsii),
its efforts to call the international doping reports into question have fallen
flat (nakanune.ru/news/2017/2/26/22462047/
and https://lenta.ru/news/2017/02/25/kolobok/),
and Russian sports tsar Vitaly Mutko has been blocked from seeking election to
the FIFA board (politsovet.ru/54706-vitaliya-mutko-izgnali-iz-soveta-fifa.html).
Nonetheless, Moscow has achieved some traction in its defense of its right to
host the 2018 World Cup by suggesting that it will oppose Los Angeles as the
host city for the 2024 Olympiad if the US continues to oppose it on the 2018
competition and some positive press for its report that Moscow has acknowledged
failures in its anti-doping program and is spending more money to combat the
illegal use of drugs by sports figures (meduza.io/news/2017/03/07/pravitelstvo-rf-vydelilo-1-6-milliarda-rubley-na-borbu-s-dopingom
and meduza.io/news/2017/03/01/putin-priznal-proval-antidopingovoy-sistemy-v-rossii).
8.
Half of All
Current Russian Residents were Born after 1991. Although the Putin regime remains obsessed
with the Soviet past, this year marks an important tipping point: half of all
residents of the Russian Federation were born after the USSR ceased to exist (infpol.ru/news/society/124387-arnold-tulokhonov-v-buryatii-ostayutsya-tupye-i-bednye/). And among those born since 1991, the share of
ethnic Russians is down and that of non-Russians and especially Muslims up (regnum.ru/news/society/2247047.html
and chernovik.net/content/respublika/shkolnye-paradoksy). But perhaps the greatest disconnect between Putin
and reality as far as demography is concerned is this: Putin is promoting a
conservative mobilization effort predicated on the notion that Russians remain
predominantly rural when in fact they are now overwhelmingly urban (css.ethz.ch/content/dam/ethz/special-interest/gess/cis/center-for-securities-studies/pdfs/RAD198.pdf).
9.
Russian City
Proclaims It is ‘Gay Free.’ In an echo of Nazi times when German officials
declared this or that place “Judenfrei,” the mayor of Svetlogorsk has proclaimed
that his city is now “gay free” and that he intends to keep it that way (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58B7BF3393C21). Meanwhile, other activists are seeking to
prohibit the Disney film “The Beauty and the Beast” because they say it
promotes homosexuality (newsland.com/community/5652/content/v-rossii-predlagaiut-zapretit-krasavitsu-i-chudovishche-za-propagandu-gomoseksualizma/5715660).
10.
Russia’s
Transportation Infrastructure Ranks alongside Gabon’s. Russia’s transportation infrastructure is so
underdeveloped that it now ranks with that of the central African country of
Gabon (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58B41FC4BB025).
Worse, some Russian officials say that laws and fines won’t be enough to make
it better: those responsible for building and repairing roads who fail to do
their jobs adequately should be sent to prison (svpressa.ru/society/article/167158/).
11.
LDPR Politician
Wants to Legalize Fan Hooliganism. Most world leaders oppose and take
active measures to limit or ban altogether hooliganism by sports fans, but a
Russian politician wants to legalize it so that fans who support one team can
take out their aggressive feelings against those of another (bbc.com/sport/football/39172314).
12.
Russian
Nationalists Want to Boycott Eurovision Contest. Because the
Eurovision competition this year will take place in Ukraine whose
representative won it last year, Russian nationalists are demanding that Moscow
boycott the international song competition and possibly organize its own
alternative to distract attention from the Ukrainian event (bbc.com/news/world-europe-39144315).
13.
Moscow’s Nationality
Chief Urges Politicians Not to Exploit Ethnic Divisions. The head of the Federal Agency for
Nationality Policy has called on politicians and officials not to use ethnic
divisions in pursuit of electoral advantage (nazaccent.ru/content/23302-barinov-prizval-politikov-ne-ekspluatirovat-nacionalnuyu.html). But the true significance of his agency in
the Russian official constellation is reflected by the fact that its employees
are paid less on average than those of
any other government structure (nazaccent.ru/content/23318-sotrudniki-fadn-zarabatyvayut-menshe-ostalnyh-chinovnikov.html).
14.
Urals City Asks to
Be Transferred from One Oblast to Another.
Many cities and towns located near the edge of one oblast have closer
relations with people in another, and now one such city has petitioned Moscow
and the two oblasts involved to redraw the border so that it can be in the oblast
to which it feels the most connected (ura.ru/news/1052279940).
15.
Russia Now Center
of New HIV/AIDS Infections in Europe.
Given cutbacks in spending on anti-retro-viral drugs and the influx of
heroin from Afghanistan, Russia today is now the largest generator of new
HIV/AIDS cases in Europe (newsland.com/community/politic/content/rossiia-ostaetsia-osnovnoi-stranoi-sbyta-afganskikh-narkotikov/5712405 and versia.ru/spid-mirovaya-drama-o-borbe-za-dengi-i-zhizn).
16. Russian Criminal Statistics Aren’t to Be Believed,
Moscow Experts Say.
Many Russians prefer not to report crimes to the police, and the police have
their own ways of deciding what crimes they will record. As a result, Russian crime statistics simply
cannot be accepted as accurate or even an approximation of the situation in
that country, experts say (lenta.ru/articles/2017/03/06/itogipol/). In a related development, Moscow has
announced that it will ignore a European Human Rights Court order to address
the problem of torture in Russian prisons and camps (newsland.com/community/7285/content/rossiia-otvergla-trebovanie-espch-borotsia-s-pytkami-v-politsii/5714917).
17.
Russia
No Longer Dominant Producer of Rocket Launchers. For the last two decades, Russia has played a
disproportionate role in the production of rocket launchers, supplying them
even to the United States. But now that market has disappeared, and Russian
producers of first stage rockets have seen their market share slip to two
percent with no sign of any recovery ahead (newsland.com/community/politic/content/dolia-rossii-na-rynke-kosmicheskikh-puskov-rukhnula-do-2/5712195).
18.
Muscovites Get
Sick More Often and Die Earlier than Residents of Other World Cities. Within Russia,
residents of Moscow have better health care and live longer than most Russians.
But if one compares the situation in Moscow with that of major cities around
the world, Muscovites get sick far more often, have less access to medical care
and die younger than do the others (iq.hse.ru/news/201928368.html). Moreover, health care in the Russian capital is
collapsing with entire sectors, including those involved in mental health, now
at risk of closing down (echo.msk.ru/news/1938938-echo.html
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58BC77E6DC6C2).
19.
Moscow Works to
Hide Problems in Northern Sea Route.
The northern sea route in which Moscow has placed so much hope is not
doing as well as planned, not only because of massive corruption but because
the construction of its icebreaker fleet is now far behind schedule. Russia’s solution? Restrict media access to
what is going on by banning the head of The Barents Observer from visiting the
country for the next five years (thebarentsobserver.com/en/arctic/2017/03/moscow-boasts-potential-arctic-transit-shipments-between-europe-asia-remain-poor, thebarentsobserver.com/en/arctic/2017/03/troubled-waters-russias-nuclear-icebreaker-program,
sobkorr.ru/news/58C28DFB3F3CD.html,
lenta.ru/articles/2017/03/10/kamchatka/
and thebarentsobserver.com/en/civil-society-and-media/2017/03/barents-observer-editor-thomas-nilsen-declared-unwanted-russia).
20.
Killing of
Homeless Animals Continues Unabated in Makhachkala. Despite the media outcry and promises to
provide new shelters, the killing of homeless animals continues unabated in the
Daghestani capital where even the intervention of local imams who point out
that such actions violate the principles of Islam appear to have had little or
no impact (yug.svpressa.ru/accidents/article/144917/).
21.
Russians are Most
Ashamed to Live So Poorly in So Rich a Country. Polls show that
Russians are in fact ashamed of many things despite the bombast of their
leaders and that they are most ashamed of living so poorly in a country which
would appear to have all the resources necessary for people to live far better
(nazaccent.ru/content/23315-bolee-20-rossiyan-stydyatsya-repressij-i.html).
22.
Moscow Introduces
Visa-Free Visits to Russian Far East. The Russian government has introduced a
program under which foreigners can visit the Russian Far East for up to eight days
without securing a visa. The country whose nationals are likely to take the
greatest advantage of this is China where residents of border regions routinely
travel to Russian areas to purchase goods at lower prices (themoscowtimes.com/news/russia-introduces-free-visas-for-countrys-far-east-57363).
23.
Omsk Eternal Flame
will Burn Only 17 Days a Year.
In a story that seems to come straight from the pages of Evelyn Waugh’s The Loved One, officials in Omsk say
that financial stringencies mean that eternal doesn’t mean eternal when it
comes to a war memorial there. Instead, the “eternal” flame will be lit on only
17 days a year (kp.ru/daily/26648/3671357/).
24. Will Tourists Come to North Caucasus During
Counter-Terrorist Operations?
Vladimir Putin and other Moscow officials have called for the
development of resorts in the North Caucasus to help bring economic development
to that troubled region, but it is far from clear that even Russians will want
to come given the dangers of violence there (kavpolit.com/articles/utopisty_s_kurortnymi_knizhkami-32327/).
25.
Russian Penal
Officials Reject Calls for Separate Jewish Jails. Saying that if they created special prisons
and camps for Jews, they would have to do so for other ethnic groups and that
such a step would make Russia’s penal system unmanageable, the leaders of that
institution have rejected the idea although they concede that it sometimes
might make sense to divide prisoners up according by nationalities (nazaccent.ru/content/23392-vo-fsin-otkazalis-ot-idei-otdelnyh.html and gazeta.ru/interview/nm/s10560125.shtml).
26.
‘Don’t Let Us Die’
Chelyabinsk Villagers Ask. Protests are on the rise across Russia, but none of
the demonstrations or petition drives is more plaintive than that by villagers
in Chelyabinsk oblast who are asking officials simply to provide them with
enough food and other goods so that they can survive their hard life (newsland.com/community/4765/content/zhiteli-cheliabinskogo-sela-napisali-petitsiiu-ne-daite-nam-umeret/5722346 and republic.ru/posts/80389).
And 12 more from countries in Russia’s
neighborhood:
1.
Baltic Governments
Call for International Tribunal on Crimes of Communism. Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania have renewed their call for the convention of an international
tribunal on the crimes of communism (nr2.lt/News/Lithuania_and_Baltics/Litva-i-Estoniya-govoryat-o-mezhdunarodnom-tribunale-po-rassledovaniyu-prestupleniy-kommunizma-124829.html).
2.
Central Asians
Want to Make Dead Aral Sea an Extreme Tourism Destination. Finally
conceding what many have recognized for a long time, the governments bordering
what used to be the Aral Sea have acknowledged that that body of water has died
and won’t be coming back. To take advantage of the new situation, they are
calling for organizing extreme tourism visits to the seabed of the former body
of water (fergananews.com/articles/9302).
3.
Hunger Spreading
in Tajikistan. Water shortages and distribution problems
mean that hunger is now spreading in some rural areas of Tajikistan, officials
admit (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1488008700).
4.
Finland Celebrates
Centennial of Independence from Russia.
Finland which secured its independence from Russia a century ago has
begun a year-long celebration of that fact (macos.livejournal.com/1487422.html).
5. Activists Transform Lenin Statue into Shevchenko One. In honor of the
great Ukrainian poet’s birthday, activists in Ukraine transformed a statue of
Vladimir Lenin into one of the poet, the latest example of “de-communization”
in that country (newsland.com/community/4489/content/tvorchestvo-po-kievski-iz-pamiatnika-leninu-sdelali-pamiatnik-shevchenko/5721773).
6.
Anniversary
of Stalin’s Death Attracts 20 to Gori. Only 20 people showed up in Gori, the
birthplace of the Soviet dictator, this year to mark the 64th anniversary
of the death of Joseph Stalin, a figure that some connoisseurs of these things
judged to be about right (http://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/298719/).
7.
Kyrgyz Cemeteries
Now to Be Divided by Religion.
Kyrgyz Muslims and Kyrgyz Christians will no longer be buried next to
one another, Bishkek officials say. Instead, the cemeteries in that country
will have Muslim sections and Christian sections for the exclusive use of the
followers of those religions (islamsng.com/kgz/news/12088).
8.
Georgia Issues Map
without Russia.
A publisher in Tbilisi has issued a map showing the world as it is with one
significant exception: the map doesn’t show Russia but instead a new body of
water, which the publisher refers to as “the Ocean of Dreams” (uainfo.org/blognews/44036-gruziya-napechatala-kartu-mira-s-ogromnym-okeanom-na-meste-rossii.html).
9.
Russian Priest
Wants Museum in Kuropaty to Show that ‘Not Everything in the USSR was Bad.’ A Russian
Orthodox priest has entered into the battle over the fate of Kuropaty, the site
of mass graves from Stalin’s times in Minsk.
Drawing on what the Soviets did to confuse the situation about the
execution of the Polish officers at Katyn, the priest is calling for the
erection of a museum at Kuropaty that will show that “not everything in the USSR
was bad,” an extreme form of apologetics for the Soviets by a Christian religious
(charter97.org/ru/news/2017/3/6/242890/).
10.
Turkmenistan
Oppressing Uzbek Minority. In many
countries in Central Asia, the titular nationality has a long history of
mistreating ethnic minorities. The situation with the Tajiks and Uzbeks is
especially well known. But this problem exists in Turkmenistan as well,
although because of Ashgabat’s totalitarian control of the media, far less is
known about how it mistreats ethnic Uzbeks. That makes a new article an
important revelation (fergananews.com/articles/9304).
11.
Fifty Percent of
Tajik Women Abused by Family Members. Every other woman in Tajikistan is the
victim of physical and mental abuse by members of her family, according to
Dushanbe experts (fergananews.com/news/26113). In another development highlighting problems
in Central Asia, Kyrgyz women are now engaged in what is called “birth tourism”
to the Russian Federation because they fear their babies will die if they are
born in hospitals at home where infant mortality rates are crushingly high (fergananews.com/articles/9300).
12.
Crimean Tatars
Will Never Accept Cultural Autonomy, Leaders Say. The Russian occupiers of Ukraine’s Crimea say
they are prepared to offer Crimean Tatars national cultural autonomy but not
any ethnic territory as such. Crimean Tatar leaders say that they will never
accept the former because they have a right to the latter under international
and Ukrainian law (turantoday.com/2017/03/crimean-tatars-autonomy.html).
No comments:
Post a Comment