Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 30 -- 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 each week
presents a selection of 13 of these other and typically neglected stories at
the end of each week. This is the 89th such compilation, and it is
again a double issue. Even then, it is only suggestive and far from complete,
but perhaps one or more of these stories will prove of broader interest.
1.
Putin Isn’t Taking
a Vacation This Year. The Kremlin has announced that Vladimir Putin
won’t be taking a vacation this year because of his enormous responsibilities (kp.ru/online/news/2790428/).
Among them are trips abroad where he cannot control the outcomes and travel
within Russia where his apparatus is working to ensure that there won’t be any
problems. Residents of Izhevsk for example have been told not to open windows
or go on their balconies while Putin is in town (echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/2008286-echo/). In addition, he appears to be working on his reelection campaign, one in which a few
decisions have been announced: The Kremlin plans to run him on a program of
trust and respect with few new policies announced, even though Russians
increasingly say they support him even though he isn’t doing what he promises
in some key areas (newsland.com/community/politic/content/rbk-v-kremle-uzhe-nachali-gotovitsia-k-pereizbraniiu-a-aktsent-budet-na-uvazhenie-i-doverie/5886409
and topwar.ru/118913-proekt-zz-treschina-v-soznanii-u-my-doveryaem-no-on-ne-boretsya-s-korrupciey.html). Quotations from Putin are now going up in Moscow subways but they
aren’t going to be featured at least anytime soon in the regions (echo.msk.ru/blog/varlamov_i/2005754-echo/
and polit.ru/news/2017/06/26/er/).
2.
Trumpism has Same
Roots as Islamist Terrorism – People’s Desire for Simple Solutions to Complicated
Problems, Writer Says. A commentator for Kyiv’s Delovaya stolitsa says that the roots of Trumpism in the United
States and ISIS in the Islamic world are the same, the desire of many people
for simple solutions to complicated problems (dsnews.ua/world/-islamskiy-terrorizm-yavlenie-togo-zhe-poryadka-chto-pobeda-21062017220000).
3.
Fourteen Million
Russians Don’t Have Enough Money Even for Food. There are now 22 million people in Russia
living in poverty, 15 percent of the total population and seven million more
than five years ago (https://rufabula.com/news/2017/06/29/poverty
highest in eight years (ng.ru/omics/2017-06-26/1_7015_bednost.html
and charter97.org/ru/news/2017/6/28/254619/). And
two-thirds of these people are really poor because they do not have enough
money to put food on their tables on a daily basis (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5954B203CCAE8).
Ever more stores and restaurants are closing in Moscow (meduza.io/news/2017/06/26/posle-nachala-moey-ulitsy-na-sadovom-koltse-zakrylos-rekordnoe-chislo-magazinov-i-restoranov), and the economic situation in Russia’s regions is
deteriorating even more rapidly than in the capitals (newsland.com/community/7411/content/rossiiskie-regiony-stali-bednet-vse-bystree/5886381). Dacha prices have collapsed to fire-sale levels as
Russians try to raise cash (svpressa.ru/realty/article/175547/),
housing vacancies in Moscow are rising as people are unwilling or unable to pay
the prices asked (svpressa.ru/realty/article/175748/),
and experts are warning that the Russian banking system is heading toward
collapse, even as Vladimir Putin and his propagandists paint a rosy picture of
economic improvement (svpressa.ru//article/175886/).
4.
Problems of
Russian Society Diversify and Intensify.
Social problems in Russia are diversifying with ever more sectors facing
difficulties and intensifying in often unexpected ways. Among such developments
this week are the following: in some regions, the authorities can’t find anyone
willing to take a position as mayor (politsovet.ru/55738-v-sverdlovskoy-oblasti-ne-mogut-nayti-kvalificirovannyh-merov.html), the demographic collapse in Russia – births are
down 10 percent this year compared to last – is now so severe that even the
Kremlin has had to acknowledge it (rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=78359),
Russians are reportedly drinking and smoking less but gaining weight as they
shift to less expensive foods (iq.hse.ru/news/207034914.html),
unidentified hooligans are blocking efforts by rights activists to investigate
torture in prisons (sobkorr.ru/infopovod/594D559834F40.html),
the Moscow Patriarchate wants Russian schools to teach old church Slavonic (rbc.ru/society/24/06/2017/594e9e349a7947d56a87306f?from=main),
Russian young people increasingly say they want to be priests or policemen, two
growth professions under Putin (newsland.com/community/5652/content/dukhovnoe-obrazovanie-chislo-zhelaiushchikh-vyuchitsia-na-sviashchennika-v-rossii-za-god-vyroslo-na-25/5886323),
Russian screening for cancer isn’t working and fails to find tumors which might
be successfully treated (lenta.ru/articles/2017/06/29/skrining/),
Moscow is ending subsidies to farmers for equipment almost certainly ensuring
new rises for food products (svpressa.ru/blogs/article/175719/),
a school director has found an interesting way to boost her salary: she has
fired most teachers and taken theirs (newizv.ru/news/society/27-06-2017/direktora-shkol-massovo-vygonyaet-uchiteley-chtoby-povysit-zarplatu-sebe),
suit by Aeroflot stewardesses dismissed because of age and weight gains the
support of a petition drive (newizv.ru/news/society/27-06-2017/petitsiya-protiv-diskriminatsii-staryh-i-tolstyh-styuardess-poyavilas-v-seti), some Russians are angry that the language used by
Russian scholars is excessively anglicized (ng.ru/ideas/2017-06-27/5_7016_language.html),
and Russian parents face a difficult summer: camps for their children are now
fewer in number and much more expensive than even a year ago (profile.ru/obsch/item/118141-putevka-v-gorod).
5.
Moscow Treats
Chechnya Even More Differently than Many Thought. Most federal
subjects have to go through a lengthy process of presenting their budgetary
needs and then negotiating with Moscow over how much they will get, but the
country’s finance minister says that one subject doesn’t have to do that.
Chechnya simply prepares its budget, indicates how much it needs, and Moscow
sends the money needed to make up any deficit (znak.com/2017-06-26/ministr_finansov_rossii_rasskazal_kak_napolnyaetsya_byudzhet_chechni). Other developments on the nationalities front this
week include the following: Buryatia’s incumbent government is seeking to use
shamans and spirit forces to help it win re-election (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/06/26/72919-kogo-podderzhat-rodovye-duhi); because they drink less, residents of Ingushetia
and Daghestan have longer life expectancies than do Russians in Moscow (nazaccent.ru/content/24558-eksperty-nazvali-regiony-s-samoj-vysokoj.html); North Caucasians identify corruption among
officials as most serious problem they face (caucasustimes.com/ru/korrupcija-pravjashhih-jelit-lidiruet-sredi-naibolee-ostryh-problem-severnogo-kavkaza/);
Khanty-Mansiisk leaders reject charges that they are separatists (fedpress.ru/article/1811672); Altay head accused of exacerbating ethnic tensions
(fedpress.ru/news/04/policy/1811515); Russian Orthodox churchman says his organization
played key role in development of Sakha nation (nazaccent.ru/content/24513-arhiepiskop-pravoslavie-pomoglo-razvitsya-yakutskoj-nacionalnoj.html); women still tortured in Mordvin camps (echo.msk.ru/blog/lev_ponomarev/2007418-echo/); pressed to use Russian more, some republics back
down while others double down in support of their own languages (nazaccent.ru/content/24539-v-komi-predlozhili-otmenit-obyazatelnoe-izuchenie.html and nazaccent.ru/content/24540-v-taksi-severnoj-osetii-nachali-darit.html).
6.
Russian Regions
Want Referenda and Elected Mayors.
The predominantly ethnic federal subjects have taken the lead in calling for
the expanded use of referenda and restoring the election of mayors (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59526D370B412). The regions, which are often ignored, also are
leaders in the development of civil society, especially among Siberian cities (iarex.ru/articles/54151.html). And some of them are now thinking about joining
trans-border groups like the Northern Council of Scandinavian countries (afterempire.info/2017/06/29/norden/).
7.
Murmansk
Protesters Win Big Victory. One of the reasons
protests continue to spread in Russia is that people there have no other way to
express their views; but another that may be becoming increasingly important is
that protests work, forcing officials to modify objectionable policies or even
to back down completely. A case of the latter happened in Murmansk this week
where residents successfully protested against the electric company which had
been charging them for heat for the last ten years but had not provided them
with any (thebarentsobserver.com/en/life-and-public/2017/06/electric-heaters-fought-murmansk-electrical-network-and-won). Protests by truckers, scholars, and those opposed
to demolishing the five-storey apartment buildings in Moscow continued as well
(themoscowtimes.com/news/meet-the-woman-placing-sculptures-of-her-breasts-on-moscow-buildings-to--demolition-58245, newizv.ru/news/society/27-06-2017/moskvichi-antirenovatory-vystroilis-v-dlinnuyu-ochered-v-priemnuyu-putina-6e9dc8d3-fd72-49c9-b212-de8398573acd, fedpress.ru/article/1810572 and rbc.ru/society/28/06/2017/59537ebf9a79470c7b26bafa?from=main). Two other new protests were notable: In Yugra, the
Russian Orthodox bishopric launched a petition drive to can the controversial
film Mathilda (echo.msk.ru/news/2009216-echo.html) and in Irkutsk, residents staged a demonstration to
demand the restoration of elected governors (fedpress.ru/picture-story/1810590).
8. US Says Russia Operates Labor Camps for North Korea. The US says
that the Russian government is operating labor camps whose inmates are North
Koreans who have reportedly been used as slave laborers (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59534FE359345). Given earlier reports about the use of North Korean
slave laborers on World Cup construction projects, such a charge is entirely
plausible; but Moscow will do everything it can to prevent anyone from finding
out (sobkorr.ru/news/5953804B20C33.html).
9.
Poetic
‘Justice.’
Ousted Mari El head Leonid Markelov has appealed to Vladimir Putin for pardon
in a poem he has written from jail (rbc.ru/politics/24/06/2017/594e89049a7947ce1aae51f7?from=main). Meanwhile, Russian Orthodox activists have decided
to go above Putin’s head to secure a ban on the Mathilda film: they are praying
to God that he take steps to make sure that happens (lenta.ru/news/2017/06/30/molitva/).
10. Moscow Comes Up with a New Way to Fight the Internet. The Russian government,
convinced that the Internet threatens Russia with revolution (apostrophe.ua/article/world/ex-ussr/2017-06-27/-boitsya-v-rossii-gotovyat-novyie-zapretyi-v-internete/13123 and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=594D3A4392A04) has come up with a new way of fighting it: planning
increases in tariffs on computers so that fewer Russians will be able to afford
to go online (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5953BDF1E1A7E). Meanwhile, however, it has kept up all its old
tactics: blocking stories it doesn’t like (ixtc.org/2017/06/v-rossii-zablokirovali-dostup-k-video-s-zayavleniyami-makrona-o-situatsii-v-ukraine/), continuing to
impose sanctions and fines on provides, and proposing legislation that would
require foreign Russian language media to register with Moscow as foreign
agents (meduza.io/news/2017/06/28/senatory-predlozhili-priravnyat-zarubezhnye-russkoyazychnye-smi-k-inostrannym-agentam-i-blokirovat-ih-v-rossii).
11. ‘Honored’ Russian Citizens and Dishonored Ones. A Russian
senator has proposed creating the status of “honored citizen” in order to
distinguish those who are more worthy than most but not about to receive more
serious awards (forum-msk.org/material/news/13385256.html). Meanwhile, a
St. Petersburg legislator wants to impose criminal penalties on Russian men who
betray their wives (versia.ru/v-rossii-mogut-zakonodatelno-zapretit-supruzheskie-izmeny).
12. Two Capitals Divide on Monuments War. One Ingrian
commentator has suggested that “a metaphysical border” exists between St.
Petersburg where people are fighting over a Mannerheim memorial and Moscow
where they are debating one to Stalin, even though he concedes there are many
similar problems in both cities (freeingria.org/2017/06/v-sankt-peterburge-diskutiruyut-ob-ustanovke-memorialnoj-doski-mannergejmu-v-moskve-ob-ustanovke-doski-stalinu-dva-mira-dva-myshleniya-metafizicheskaya-granitsa-evropy-i-azii/). In St.
Petersburg, the Russian Orthodox Church has shifted to a longer-term strategy
to get back St. Isaac’s, confident that it has the government in its corner (portal-credo.ru/site/?act=monitor&id=25742, novayagazeta.ru/news/2017/06/27/132904-isaakiy-razreshil-rpts-provodit-v-muzee-bolshie-prazdnichnye-bogosluzheniya
and spektr.press/news/2017/06/28/zaksobranie-peterburga-priznalo-nezakonnym-referendum-o-peredache-isaakiya-rpc/). In Moscow, the
Stalin memorial at the Legal Academy has sparked serious conflicts among the
capital’s scholars and rights activists (newsland.com/community/5652/content/vysshaia-shkola-ekonomiki-otkazalas-ot-sotrudnichestva-s-mgiua-iz-za-pamiatnoi-doski-stalinu/5895326
and meduza.io/news/2017/06/27/genri-reznik-ushel-iz-moskovskoy-yuridicheskoy-akademii-v-vuze-vosstanovili-memorialnuyu-dosku-stalina).
The monuments war continued elsewhere as well: the Russian Orthodox Church
wants to take over and close the Gagarin Museum, possibly because of the cosmonaut’s
dismissive words about god (znak.com/2017-06-26/glavred_eha_moskvy_poprosil_putina_spasti_muzey_gagarina_kotoryy_hotyat_peredat_cerkvi), and
conservative activists continue to press for the closure of the Yeltsin Center
in Yekaterinburg (newsland.com/community/5625/content/proverit-eltsin-tsentr-kak-tsentr-propagandy-razvrata/5893113).
13. Russia’s Hosting of 2018 World Cup Threatened from
Within and Without. Ever more voices are being raised against
what many Russians see as the wasteful spending for venues for the 2018 World Cup
(forum-msk.org/material/economic/13385663.html). They point out that the money could be better used
to help increasingly impoverished Russians, and Sochi residents are pointing
out that despite Moscow’s promises, athletic facilities are often white
elephants that pass into disuse after competitions (kavpolit.com/articles/vlasti_sochi_gotov_k_provedeniju_chempionata_mira-34491/ and newsland.com/community/4109/content/v-sochi-oprovergli-slova-putina-ob-ispolzovanii-olimpiiskikh-postroek/5887818). Such appeals are gaining traction because of reports
that officials are destroying the houses of some residents to build facilities
without informing the residents in advance (svoboda.org/a/28573667.html). Meanwhile, British and German athletes say they don’t
want to go to Moscow for the World Cup, something that has infuriated Russian
commentators (newsland.com/community/5652/content/smi-sbornye-anglii-i-germanii-ne-khotiat-bazirovatsia-v-moskve-vo-vremia-chm-2018/5890784 and svpressa.ru/sport/article/175625/). Moscow writers
also suspect that Ukraine is planning to demonstratively refuse to take part in
order to cause other countries to follow (segodnya.ua/sport/football/v-rossii-utverzhdayut-chto-ukraina-demonstrativno-otkazhetsya-ot-uchastiya-v-chm-2018-1033556.html). The doping scandal continues to spread: the
International Anti-Doping Agency says Russia’s counterpart can only conduct
tests under international supervision (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=595279C380353). And now some Russians are asking the unthinkable:
will Russia itself be allowed to take part in the 2018 World Cup (newsland.com/community/5652/content/budet-li-uchastvovat-rossiia-v-chm-18-po-futbolu/5889341).
14. Russia Restricts Entry of Those Bearing Only LNR and
DNR Passports. Fearful that
those who have been taking part in Moscow’s war against Ukraine in the Donbass
may reimport violence into Russia, the Russian authorities have stopped
admitting people who hold only LNR or DNR passports (dsnews.ua/society/zrya-ukrainskiy-pasport-zhgli-v-rossiyu-perestali-puskat-29062017111400). In a related development, official treatment of the
mother of a soldier who died in the Donbass highlighted for all that Moscow is
failing to keep it promises to the families of those killed in battle (ura.news/articles/1036271366). Meanwhile,
Chechnya is expanding the number of its citizens who can legally carry guns (ekhokavkaza.com/a/28583905.html), and Moscow is mulling increasing the age of draft exposure in order
to be able to meet quotas for the military (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=594D0B3BD0DA5).
15.
Has Russia Slipped
to Third Place among World’s Navies? To
the outrage of some in Russia, Chinese media are suggesting that China, not
Russia, now ranks second among the world’s navies with Russia’s only advantage
over China now being in submarines (newsland.com/community/5234/content/kitaiskie-smi-nedoumevaiut-pochemu-vtorym-flotom-v-mire-schitaetsia-rossiiskii-a-ne-kitaiskii/5895356). The Chinese claims are exaggerated but that they
can be made at all reflects both China’s rise and Russia’s fall in defense
matters. Moscow is cutting the military budget by five percent this year, its
military industry is in trouble, and officials acknowledge it won’t have a real
aircraft carrier until at least 2030 (apostrophe.ua/article/politics/2017-06-29/vajno-znat-ne-tolko-ukraine-chastnaya-razvedka-ssha-raskryila-voennyie-planyi-kremlya/13137,
http://svpressa.ru/war21/article/175743/
and forum-msk.org/material/news/13388422.html).
It is claiming increased arms sales but since most of the information about
them is classified, no one is sure whether Moscow is exaggerating on this point
(iz.ru/611919/2017-06-28/rosoboroneksport-snabzhaet-oruzhiem-polsotni-stran
and svpressa.ru/war21/article/175361/).
And in one development with important defense implications, Daghestani analysts
are reporting that Russia is losing out to other Caspian littoral states
because it has failed to develop its own ports (chernovik.net/content/ekonomika/kaspiyskiy-kollaps).
16.
Russia Cutting
Itself Off from World Growth, Kudrin Group Says. By moving in the
direction of autarchy, Aleksey Kudrin’s group of analysts says, Russia is
marginalizing itself from growth in the rest of the world and thus falling
further and further behind. Only reintegration and soon can slow this process,
it says (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59550FAF56F63).
17.
Russians Don’t
Trust Businessmen Except Themselves.
Russians have a very negative view of businessmen, according to a new
study (iq.hse.ru/news/207142767.html),
but they are more entrepreneurial than many think and will find ways to end run
any effort to ban self-employment as the government would like to do (fedpress.ru/expert-opinion/1811632).
18.
Russian Tourists
Caught Stealing Toilet Paper from Turkish Hotel. A group of
Russian tourists in Turkey was caught stealing toilet paper from the rooms of a
hotel there (lenta.ru/news/2017/06/29/hotel_theft/).
19.
Russian
Nationalists Say They’re Open to Alliances with All Opposition Groups. Ivan Beletsky, a
leading Russian extra-systemic nationalist, says that Russian nationalists are
now ready to form alliances with any group that opposes the reelection of
Vladimir Putin (rusmonitor.com/ivan-beleckijj-russkie-nacionalisty-gotovy-k-dialogu.html).
20.
Russia a Paradise
of Criminologists, One of Their Number Says.
Not only is there a lot of crime in Russia, but various government agencies
collect an impressive volume of data about it, thus making that country “a
paradise” for those who study crime, according to one Russian criminologist (vedomosti.ru/opinion/articles/2017/06/29/700947-rossiya-kriminologa#/galleries/140737488932819/normal/1).
21.
By Two to One,
Russians Favor Restoring Moscow’s Control over Former Soviet States. A new poll shows
that Russians support by a margin of two to one Vladimir Putin’s efforts to
restore Russian influence in and even control over former Soviet republics on
Russia’s periphery (pewglobal.org/2017/06/20/russians-remain-confident-in-putins-global-leadership/pg_2017-06-20_russia-report_12/).
22.
It’s Easier to
Become a Saint in Russia than Almost Anywhere Else. The Moscow
Patriarchate official who oversees canonization says that the Russian Orthodox
Church currently venerates about 5,000 saints, half of which were made saints
only over the last 25 years (snob.ru/selected/entry/126151).
23.
New Muslim
Internet Radio in Syria Broadcasts in Russian, Other Post-Soviet Languages. A new Internet radio project in Syria which
positions itself as an independent Islamic voice is now broadcasting in Russian
as well as the languages of Central Asia and the Caucasus, an indication of the
numbers of people from those locations now in Syria on various sides of the
conflict (fergananews.com/articles/9464).
24.
Kremlin Pollster
Says 15 Percent of Russians are ‘Unpatriotic Shit.’ VTsIOM pollster
Valery Fedorov says that “25 percent of Russians are unpatriotic shit,”
presumably including in that number all those who are ready to declare that
they do not support Vladimir Putin and his policies (meduza.io/en/news/2017/06/29/kremlin-pollster-says-15-percent-of-russians-are-unpatriotic-shit).
25.
What is Best for Russia:
Revolution, Chaos or Disintegration? A
Moscow commentator says that the situation in his country is now so dire that
it is time to ask which of the three most likely outcomes would be the worst
for the country: revolution, a descent into chaos, or disintegration (newsland.com/community/5392/content/chto-dlia-rossii-luchshe-revoliutsiia-smuta-ili-raspad/5886741).
26.
There are Good
Russians.
Two women in Volgograd are part of an organization that sends people to the
homes of those who are sick and have no family members or friends to look after
them, but in reporting this story, Takie
Dela notes that there are only two of them in a city with a million people
(takiedela.ru/2017/06/ochen-zdu-kogda-priedut/).
And twelve more from countries in
Russia’s neighborhood:
1.
In Belarus, There
Really is a Russian Bear in the Woods. Residents of eastern Belarus have been
terrorized by a Russian bear which has wandered over the border from his
homeland (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/6/25/254223/).
2.
Belarusians
Petition for Cancelling Future Military Parades. After the latest victory day military parade
in Minsk tore up the streets and led to the destruction of numerous trees along
the roadside, a group of Belarusians has petitioned to cancel all future
military parades there (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/6/25/254237/ and charter97.org/ru/news/2017/6/25/254217/).
3.
Belarus Gets Its
First Zombie Apocalypse Novel. The first-ever zombie apocalypse novel
has now appeared in Belarusian, a development that reflects the expanding role
of the titular language there (belsat.eu/ru/news/oginskij-protiv-zombi-ili-kak-poyavilsya-pervyj-belorusskij-zombi-horror/).
4. 75 Percent of Targets of Petya Virus were in Ukraine. While some commentators suggested that the
Petya virus had originated in Ukraine, subsequent research has shown that 75
percent of the institutions targeted by it were in Ukraine, a pattern that
suggests it and not anyone else was the target and that Russian forces were
almost certainly behind it (segodnya.ua/ukraine/bolshe-75-atak-virusa-petya-prishlis-na-ukrainu-1034062.html).
5.
Ukraine
Passes Russia on World Social Progress Index.
Ukraine now ranks 64th on the Social Progress Index, surpassing
Russia which now ranks 67th (socialprogressindex.com/assets/downloads/resources/en/English-2017-Social-Progress-Index-Findings-Report_embargo-d-until-June-21-2017.pdf).
6.
Few in Ukraine
Want to Admit They’ve Fought on Russian Side. A major problem with statistics
about losses as a result of Russian intervention in Ukraine is that ethnic
Ukrainians and even some Russians now do not want to acknowledge that they or
their relatives fought for the pro-Moscow side (https://www.svoboda.org/a/28578120.html).
7.
Many in Donbass
Now Hate Russia But Don’t Necessarily Want to Be Part of Ukraine. Many assume that residents in the Donbass
look either to Moscow or to Kyiv, but new surveys suggest that an increasing
fraction of them now hate Russia because it hasn’t supported them as they
expected. At the same time, however, many of them don’t want to be part of
Ukraine either (apostrophe.ua/article/politics/government/2017-06-22/na-donbasse-nenavidyat-rossiyu-no-ukraine-ot-etogo-ne-legche/13066).
8.
Newspeak Spreads
in Russian-Occupied Portions of Ukraine. Those in control of Russian-occupied
portions of Ukraine are now employing a language of euphemisms and distortions
that resembles nothing so much as the newspeak George Orwell described in his
novel 1984 (glavred.info/zhizn/novoyaz-lnr-unichtozhenie-boevika-gibel-mirnogo-ranenie-v-boyu-bytovaya-travma-444062.html).
9. Russia’s Kerch Bridge Already Harming Environment. An ecologist has
warned that the Kerch bridge Moscow is building and now says is half done is
irreversibly damaging the environment of surrounding waters (qha.com.ua/ru/obschestvo/ekolog-stroitelstvo-kerchenskogo-mosta-razrushit-ekosistemu-morya/175350/
and newsland.com/community/4489/content/stroiteli-vypolnili-bolshe-poloviny-rabot-na-kerchenskom-mostu/5894647).
10.
Russian
Occupiers in Sevastopol Now Give 17 Times as Much Money to Cossacks as to
Invalids.
A measure of the priorities of the illegal Russian occupation of Crimea
is that officials in Sevastopol are now giving 17 times as much money to
Cossack organizations than to the care of invalids in the population as a whole
(newsland.com/community/4109/content/sevastopolskim-kazakam-deneg-dali-v-17-raz-bolshe-chem-invalidam/5886345).
11.
Kazakhstan and
Kyrgyzstan Deny Moscow Reports They’ll Be Sending Troops to Syria. Both Astana and
Bishkek deny reports in the Russian media that they plan to send troops in support
of Russia’s war effort in Syria (turantoday.com/2017/06/syria-kazakhstan-kyrgyzstan-forces.html).
12.
Nazarbayev Wants
to Accelerate Shift to Latin Script.
Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev has indicated that he wants to
push for a more rapid shift from Cyrillic to the Latin script for his country’s
national language, a move that has infuriated Moscow and may spark further
ethnic Russian outmigration from Kazakhstan (newsland.com/community/7451/content/nazarbaev-khochet-uskorit-perevod-kazakhskogo-iazyka-na-latinitsu/5886103).
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