Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 22 -- 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 these other and typically neglected stories at the end
of each week. This is the 92nd such compilation, and it is again a
double issue with 26 from Russia and 13 from Russia’s neighbors. Even then, it
is far from complete, but perhaps one or more of these stories will prove of
broader interest.
1.
Does Hollywood Now
Have the Best Kremlinologists?
Hollywood writers have removed Vladimir Putin from two films scheduled
to be released next year, an indication that perhaps they do not expect him to
be in office by then – or at least relevant to Western audiences (meduza.io/news/2017/07/20/a-ubrali-iz-stsenariev-dvuh-gollivudskih-filmov-2018-goda). Meanwhile, Russians found out just how little
impact complaining to the Kremlin leader can have. After Murmansk residents
told him that they didn’t have hot water, Putin fixed the problem: they got hot
water for exactly 20 minutes and then it was cold once again (znak.com/2017-07-21/murmanchane_pozhalovalis_u_na_otsutstvie_goryachey_vody_ee_dali_no_lish_na_20_minut). Other Putin
news this week: a Russian activist who posted an image of Putin as a Nazi was
jailed for three days (meduza.io/en/news/2017/07/14/russian-activist-is-jailed-for-three-days-for-reposting-an-image-depicting--as-a-nazi), the network of souvenir shops for the
Uralvagonzavod factory which Putin used as a centerpiece in his last campaign
closed because of debt (lenta.ru/news/2017/07/20/uvz/),
Putin eliminated the last vestiges of competitive democracy by requiring that
even opposition candidates be cleared by Kremlin officials (nr2.lt/News/politics_and_society/Novoe-rasporyazhenie-a-prevrashchaet-vybory-v-eshche-bolshiy-fars--125841.html),
and a British newspaper has published an unconfirmed report that Putin now
routinely bathes in the blood from severed deer antlers in order to prolong his
life (dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4707444/-bathes-blood-cut-severed-deer-antlers.html).
2.
Putin Views Trump
as Russian Agent, Felshtynsky Says.
Yury Feltshynsky, a Russian specialist on Moscow’s security services now
living in the US, says that Vladimir
Putin views Donald Trump as just the latest Russian agent these services have
recruited (dsnews.ua/world/-s-tochki-zreniya-putina-tramp---ocherednoy-zaverbovannyy-im-18072017220000). Whether that is true or not remains to be
seen, but one thing is certainly the case: Russian agents of influence have now
had an impact not just on the US president but, as one would expect from Soviet
and Russian precedents, on a far larger cast of characters in the US, including
some in the now ruling Republican Party (regnum.ru/news/polit/2303074.html,
thedailybeast.com/gop-lawmaker-got-direction-from-moscow-took-it-back-to-dc
and theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/07/russian-anti-sanctions-campaign-turned-to-california-congressman/534102/).
There may be trouble ahead for these relationships, however. On the one hand,
Putin clearly does not understand that the American political system is not
dependent on one man or even a few but on a large number of institutions and
understandings. And on the other, Trump
has nominated a Mormon as the next US ambassador to Moscow. Given that the
Mormons may not be a target of the Putin regime after its attacks on the
Jehovah’s Witnesses, that sets up a potential conflict that few have yet been
focusing on (ura.news/articles/1036271558).
3.
Russian Economic
Prospects at Macro Level Anything But Rosy. Russian faces a long period of
relatively slow GDP growth, something that will mean the country will fall
further and further behind the rest of the world, according to Russian bankers
(polit.ru/article/2017/07/14/gdp/).
In other bad macro-economic news, Russians are now recognizing that their
currency, the ruble, is at best a regional one, freely convertible only in
Moscow-dominated structures in Eurasia (ng.ru/economics/2017-07-19/1_7032_rubl.html),
the country’s commercial river fleet is collapsing eliminating one of the main
integuments holding the economy together (profile.ru/economics/item/118555-zatonuvshie-milliardy),
and even Russian officials now project that oil prices will remain low for many
years, thus eliminating the possibility for a miracle that would turn the
country’s economy around (rusjev.net/2017/07/19/v-rossii-zayavili-o-zakate-neftyanyih-godov/).
4.
6,000 Dollar
Millionaires have Fled Russia in Last Three Years. In a vote of no
confidence about Russia’s future, 6,000 Russian dollar millionaires and
billionaires have fled the country over the last three years, adding to the
14,000 others who left over the previous decade (newsland.com/community/4765/content/za-13-let-rossiiu-pokinuli-20000-dollarovykh-millionerov-i-milliarderov-6000-tolko-za-poslednie-3-goda/5919199). Most of Russia’s middle class has been hard hit by
the economic crisis (iq.hse.ru/news/207514710.html),
wage arrears are increasing across the country (newsland.com/community/4788/content/rabochim-so-stroiploshchadki-iamal-spg-tri-mesiatsa-ne-platiat-zarplatu/5917476
and politsovet.ru/55956-esche-na-odnom-uralskom-zavode-rabochim-ne-platyat-zarplatu.html), Russians are cutting back vacation travel even
domestically (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=596DBF8E58CBF),
personal debt now exceeds 650 billion rubles (11 billion US dollars (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=596EEBD5F0155),
and the market basket of basic foods continues to increase in price thanks to
weather-induced shortages (newsland.com/community/4788/content/minimalnyi-nabor-produktov-v-rossii-podorozhal-na-15/5921117).
5.
Three-Quarters of
Russian Government Social Payments Don’t Go to the Neediest. Russian social
welfare payments generally go to those who need them least, with only a quarter
going to Russia’s poorest people (newsland.com/community/4788/content/tri-chetverti-sotsvyplat-ne-dokhodiat-do-nuzhdaiushchikhsia/5920950). But there are many other social problems that were
highlighted in the Russian media this week: more than half of Russians with university degrees
can’t work in the fields they were trained for (meduza.io/cards/pochemu-tak-mnogo-lyudey-rabotayut-ne-po-spetsialnosti),
Russian officials are exploring whether spinners are subversive (nakanune.ru/news/2017/7/18/22476578/),
Russia’s educational system thanks to Putin’s optimization program has been
compared to the Titanic hitting the iceberg (newsland.com/community/7451/content/nash-titanik-priot-na-aisberg-kak-spasti-prognivshuiu-sistemu-obrazovaniia/5919962),
Russia faces a serious honey shortage (krizis-kopilka.ru/archives/42850),
the Duma has now permitted Russian airlines to charge passengers for checked
baggage (versia.ru/passazhirov-obyazhut-doplachivat-za-perevozku-bagazha-v-samolete),
vodka production rose 57 percent in the first quarter despite Moscow’s claims
that Russians are drinking less and talk of ending alcohol sales on weekends (newsland.com/community/politic/content/vodki-v-rossii-vypushcheno-za-polugodie-bolshe-sigaret-menshe/5921948,
/iz.ru/621632/2017-07-20/minzdrav-potreblenie-alkogolia-sokratilos-v-rossii
and iz.ru/619340/evgeniia-pertceva/vykhodnoi-bez-vodki),
Russia is drowning in trash, something sparking protests and concern in many
places (vedomosti.ru/business/articles/2017/07/03/706067-rossiya-musore),
ever more men are turning to prostitution to make ends meet (snob.ru/selected/entry/126923),
and strip clubs are closing down at increasing rates across Russia (moslenta.ru/city/striptiz.htm?utm_source=from_lenta).
6.
Putin’s Maternal
Capital Program Helping to Make Russia Less Russian. Because of its
poor design, Vladimir Putin’s maternal capital program is boosting or at least
maintaining already high birthrates in Muslim areas while doing little or
nothing to prevent the decline in birthrates among ethnic Russian women (ng.ru/economics/2017-07-18/2_7031_demografia.html). Indeed, an increasing share of the latter are
choosing to be childless, something driving down the share of ethnic Russians
in the population (rwns.online/economy/Ekonomisti-prognoziruyut-rost-chisla-besplodnih-zhenschin-v-Rossii--2017-07-17).
While immigration has been compensating for about two-thirds of the indigenous
decline (nazaccent.ru/content/24786-rosstat-migracionnyj-prirost-na-dve-treti.html),
Moscow officials say that immigration is now falling and so won’t be doing that
in the coming years (rbc.ru/society/19/07/2017/596f70789a79472ee3f6f5e7).
More bad demographic news can be expected next year when Russia will run a
pilot census in advance of the regular one scheduled for 2020 (svpressa.ru/society/news/177159/).
Meanwhile, Russia’s health crisis continues to deepen. Ninety-five percent of
the country’s doctors say the health sector is now a disaster (ng.ru/economics/2017-07-18/4_7031_medicina.html),
the quality of medicines is declining as fast as their availability (ria.ru/society/20170714/1498500713.html),
an HIV epidemic has broken out in Novosibirsk (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5968A84F25923),
and patients with rare diseases are increasingly having to go to court to force
hospital administrators to give them the medications they need (newsland.com/community/129/content/regiony-sudiatsia-s-bolnymi-detmi/5923767).
7. Russia Ranks Near Bottom in the World on Pensions But
Top People Take Care of Themselves.
Russia ranks in the bottom five of 43 countries evaluated in terms of
support for pensioners (news.mail.ru/society/30437548/),
but senior officials like the president and prime minister have planned
pensions 46 times those of the Russian average (ekb.dk.ru/news/v-46-raz-bolshe-sredney-kakie-pensii-u-prezidenta-premiera-i-ministrov-237084059).
8.
Chechnya Should Vote
on Independence, Commentator Says. Leonid Gozman
says that Chechnya clearly needs to have a referendum on whether to become
independent of Russia (kavkazr.com/a/28629081.html). Meanwhile, Moscow appears desirous of provoking a
conflict with Tatarstan by failing to agree to any extension of the
power-sharing accord with Kazan (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/07/17/73141-nazad-v-1994-god). Interethnic conflicts in Daghestan are now so
intense that Moscow has formed a commission to try to figure out what to do to
rein them in (chernovik.net/content/respublika/ni-voyny-ni-mira, nazaccent.ru/content/24752-fadnu-predlozhili-sformirovat-komissiyu-dlya-resheniya.html and onkavkaz.com/news/1785-video-glava-lezginskoi-avtonomii-povedal-putinu-kak-vlasti-dagestana-sabotiruyut-ego-poruchenij.html?fromslider). One
nationality, however, is getting some of what it wants: the 97 Yiddish speakers
in Birobidzhan are going to be allowed to have street signs in their native language in its alphabet on the
streets of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, something Moscow has opposed allowing
all other nationalities to do (nazaccent.ru/content/24764-deputaty-eao-uzakonili-nadpisi-na-yazyke.html). An activist in Siberia has been arrested for
promoting pan-Finnic ideas (ovdinfo.org/express-news/2017/07/14/na-zhitelya-krasnoyarska-zaveli-delo-o-vethnic
ozvelichivanii-finnov-u-nego),
and the Altay peoples and their related nations have held a forum in Bishkek to
promote “Altai civilization” (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1500613200).
9.
Moscow Increasingly
Worried about Regionalism in Russia.
The Russian central government is increasingly worried about the revival
of regionalist ideas in predominantly ethnic Russian regions (afterempire.info/2017/07/20/mirror/)
and is working to block independent-minded Russian candidates from running for
governors and possibly promoting this trend (newsland.com/community/8171/content/roizmana-ne-pustiat-na-gubernatorskie-vybory/5920831).
Meanwhile, there is increasing appreciation among Rusisan regions that
Tatarstan’s fight for an extension of the power-sharing accord is not just
about the non-Russians but about the future of federalism for everyone (business-gazeta.ru/article/352064),
and officials have cracked down hard on those in Kaliningrad who they say are
promoting regionalism and even separatism there (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/07/20/pora_ostanovit_akademicheskij_separatizm_i_izmenu/, kaliningrad.glavny.tv/news/72388
and newsbalt.ru/analytics/2017/07/v-kaliningrade-
nuzhna-lyustraciya-tekh-kt/).
10.
Orthodox Church
Doesn’t Want State to Supervise Its Activities. The Moscow
Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church is making it clear that it doesn’t
want the state interfering with its activities although it feels free to reject
government requirements and laws governing the treatment of minors and
finger-printing (hraniteli-nasledia.com/articles/diskussii/patriarkhiya-protiv-obshchestvennogo-kontrolya/,
politsovet.ru/55984-rpc-otkazalas-sdavat-otpechatki-palcev.html,
pravmir.ru/tserkov-otkazala-politsii-v-provedenii-daktiloskopii-v-monastyiryah/ and newsbabr.com/msk/?IDE=162517).
And the Russian church has succeeded in freezing out all other denominations
from television, the most important communications channel in Russia (sobesednik.ru/kultura-i-tv/20170713-govorit-i-pokazyvaet-rpc). But one interesting development this week occurred
among another group: the pagans, out of which emerged a new court case about
the supposed harm caused by offending their feelings (ng.ru/events/2017-07-19/11_424_yazuchniki.html and spektr.press/news/2017/07/19/sk-rf-vozbudil-delo-ob-oskorblenii-yazychnicej-chuvstv-drugogo-yazychnika/).
11. Duma Deputies Press Putin for Legalization of Handguns
and Concealed Carry Rights. A group of
Duma deputies has called on Vladimir Putin to support legislation that would
allow Russians to own handguns and carry them in a concealed way (radiovesti.ru/brand/61178/episode/1399663/). Meanwhile, in other domestic security
developments, it was reported and then denied that Moscow had reduced the
staffs of its anti-extremism units (znak.com/2017-07-18/mvd_otricaet_informaciyu_o_sokracheniyah_v_otdelah_po_borbe_s_ekstremizmom
and iz.ru/620423/oleg-fochkin/mvd-sokrashchaet-borbu-s-ekstremizmom),
Putin elevated the Russian Guard to the status of a strategic enterprise
meaning that its funding is largely beyond touch (polit.ru/news/2017/07/17/rosgvardia/),
more corruption and illegal use of force was discovered among senior FSB
officers (regnum.ru/news/polit/2302756.html
and znak.com/2017-07-20/v_tyumeni_rassleduyut_delo_bandy_killerov_iz_fsb), draft resistance appears to be spreading in some
Russian areas (sobkorr.ru/news/596DD69A968A4.html),
Putin signed a law depriving those draftees who test positive for drugs of
military benefits (newsland.com/community/5652/content/putin-podpisal-zakon-o-lishenii-voennykh-posobii-za-neprokhozhdenie-testa-na-narkotiki/5921528
and russian.rt.com/russia/news/410265-putin-zakon-voennye-posobiya), Sakhalin residents fearful of radiation have asked
Moscow to raise two atomic bombs located under water near their shores (newizv.ru/news/society/15-07-2017/sahalinskie-deputaty-prosyat-podnyat-dve-atomnye-bomby-s-upavshego-tu-95), and Russian airports are increasingly in trouble
with inadequate flight control and weather protection (newsland.com/community/7285/content/pogodnaia-pereplata/5920984, siberiantimes.com/other/others/news/were-sorry-to-announce-holiday-flight-is-delayed-because-the-runway-has-turned-into-a-lake/
and kommersant.ru/doc/3360601).
12.
Syrian War has
Cost Russia 140 Billion Rubles Already, Yabloko Says. The Russian
government refuses to publish figures on the cost of its military intervention
in Syria, but the Yabloko opposition party says that it estimates that Moscow
may have spent 140 billion rubles (2.2 billion US dollars) there already (vedomosti.ru/politics/articles/2017/07/20/724737-yabloko-voinu).
Russian officials have also worked hard to conceal military losses there (newsland.com/community/4109/content/rossiia-skryvaet-istinnye-poteri-v-sirii/5918168).
Other foreign policy and security news this week included: experts say Russia
can’t compete without an aircraft carrier fleet and can’t afford to build one (forum-msk.org/material/news/13476981.html),
Moscow’s decision to send a Typhoon class submarine from Murmansk to the Baltic
on the surface has sparked suggestions that this was an act of intimidation or
that it may mean the ship has serious problems when it is submerged (thebarentsobserver.com/en/security/2017/07/typhoon-sails-surface and thebarentsobserver.com/en/security/2017/07/im-deeply-concerned-about-safety-board-nuclear-armageddon-machine),
Russia is rapidly losing its ability to be competitive in space (newsland.com/community/5652/content/po-prognozu-space-x-za-rf-vskore-ostanetsia-menee-10-rynka-kosmicheskikh-puskov/5916608 and newsland.com/community/5206/content/rossiia-otlozhila-nauchnuiu-missiiu-na-iupiter-i-na-veneru-i-na-lunu-groshau-niama/5916451),
Moscow celebrated as a diplomatic triumph its success in getting the countries
of the Organization for the Collective Security Treaty to fight revisionism on
World War II (ej.ru/?a=note&id=31337),
and officials announced plans to expand Russia’s export of nuclear technologies
in order to make money (regnum.ru/news/economy/2303477.html).
13.
Protesters have
Figured Out How to Foil Face Recognition Technologies. Moscow thought
it could intimidate people into not protesting by deploying facial recognition
technologies and then publishing lists of participants in demonstrations, but
protesters have figured out some simple and inexpensive ways to foil such
systems and disseminated information about them on social media (belsat.eu/ru/news/v-rossii-pridumali-kak-obmanut-sistemu-raspoznavaniya-litsa/). Meanwhile, protests continued to expand
geographically and in terms of subject. Among the most intriguing this week
were protests against communal costs and renovations in numerous cities (novayagazeta.ru/news/2017/07/15/133517-v-krasnodarskom-krae-zhiteli-otpravlennogo-vlastyami-pod-snos-doma-perekryli-federalnuyu-trassu,
newsland.com/community/129/content/uchastniki-mitinga-v-kalache-na-donu-vystupili-protiv-povysheniia-tsen-na-kommunalnye-uslugi/5916491
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=596C62A1854C2),
plans for a celebration of the birthday of Eduard Rossel, a leading Russian
regionalist (politsovet.ru/55938-v-sverdlovskoy-oblasti-sozdan-orgkomitet-po-yubileyu-rosselya.html),
and the blocking of the Roskomnadzor building in Moscow (republic.ru/posts/85090). For those
tracking where demonstrations are happening, Federal Press has begun issuing
interactive maps by region (fedpress.ru/article/1823162
and fedpress.ru/article/1823116).
14.
Kremlin Assaulting
Freedom of Expression Across the Board, Human Rights Watch Says. The international
human rights group says that in every sector it monitors, the Kremlin has
cracked down hard over the last year (hrw.org/report/2017/07/18/online-and-all-fronts/russias-assault-freedom-expression).
Evidence of this includes: Moscow now leads in requests to Google to take down
stories the Kremlin doesn’t like (rbc.ru/newspaper/2017/07/21/5970dff19a7947741150305b),
the European Human Rights Court is taking ever more appeals from Russians about
their mistreatment (echo.msk.ru/news/2020620-echo.html),
and the number of snitches in the Russian population has risen to unprecedented
levels (glavred.info/mir/v-rossii-ogromnoe-chislo-stukachey-specsluzhb-advokat-447842.html
and obozrevatel.com/abroad/39586-oni-povsyudu-fejgin-rasskazal-grustnuyu-pravdu-o-rossii.htm). Meanwhile, while many in the West view
anti-gay oppression and violence as a Chechen problem, new reports show that it
is ever more a Russian problem: The Soviets imprisoned approximately 1,000 gay people
every year from 1934 on for their sexual orientation and Russia continued this
trend, although jailing only 100 a year (anews.com/p/64205286/), and this
week an Omsk store refused to hire a gay sales person (snob.ru/selected/entry/127119).
Other repressive actions this week: the Duma passed a law giving the government
control of the election of the president of the Academy of Sciences (nakanune.ru/news/2017/7/20/22476877/),
the legislature passed an unconstitutional measure allowing the authorities to
deprive terrorists of Russian citizenship (ixtc.org/2017/07/gosduma-odobrila-zakon-o-lishenii-terroristov-grazhdanstva-rf/),
Russia’s schools have been ordered to introduce a special set of lectures on
the Crimean Anschluss (iz.ru/621208/pavel-panov/vossoedinenie-kryma-s-rossiei-vkliuchaiut-v-shkolnuiu-programmu),
journalists are now being threatened by anonymous people for anti-government
actions (cpj.org/2017/07/russian-journalist-warned-by-anonymous-text-messag.php), persons unknown splashed Yulia Latinina’s
residence with an unknown substance (newsland.com/community/politic/content/politsiia-vyiasniaet-kto-oblil-dom-zhurnalistki-latyninoi-neizvestnoi-zhidkostiu/5922693), the Duma approved the oath people must take in
order to become Russian citizens (nakanune.ru/news/2017/7/19/22476742/)
and Duma members complained that secularism, although included in the
constitution, is “destructive for morality” (newsland.com/community/4109/content/v-gosdume-schitaiut-svetskoe-gosudarstvo-razrushitelnym-dlia-nravstvennosti/5920737). Meanwhile, lawyers pointed out that many
judges are filing inaccurate declarations of income or saying they have law
degrees when they don’t (newsland.com/community/5652/content/v-sudakh-rossii-rabotaiut-sudi-s-poddelnymi-diplomami/5920660 and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/306296/).
15. Russia’s Fans Increasingly Rowdy and Increasingly
Political.
Russian soccer fans have shocked many by their racist rants and nudity, things
that could cause problems if Moscow is allowed to host the 2018 World Cup (championat.com/football/news-2851956-fanaty-spartaka-skandirovali-rasistskuju-krichalku-vo-vremja-igry-s-lokomotivom.html and themoscowtimes.com/news/naked-fans-58396). But most fans continue to enjoy the support
of the authorities because they back Kremlin causes like traditionalism and
support for Russia’s imperial past (echo.msk.ru/blog/day_photo/2018996-echo/).
Meanwhile, Moscow boasted that it had solved its doping problem even as it
complained that Russian athletes were being discriminated against by
international sports federations (politobzor.net/show-138109-kazanskiy-plan-deystviy-rossiya-svyazyvaet-ruki-wada.html
and newsland.com/community/7451/content/potselui-po-amerikanski-ili-kak-sportsmeny-ssha-ot-nakazaniia-ukhodiat/5917291).
16.
Russia’s Monuments
Wars Heat Up on Anniversary of Murder of Imperial Family. Russians in various cities marched to mark
the anniversary of the Bolshevik murder of the members of the Imperial Family
and also to attack any criticism of the last tsar as in the film Mathilda (themoscowtimes.com/news/Russia-marches-to-mark-anniversary-of-tsar-nicholas-murder-58410,
rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=78541
and newsland.com/community/4765/content/bolelshchiki-futbolnykh-klubov-spartak-i-lokomotiv-vystupili-protiv-filma-matilda/5917053). Statues of Nicholas II went up as others were
attacked and as Vladimir Zhirinovsky called for renaming Sverdlovsk Oblast
because its name refers to one of those who ordered the killing of the Imperial
Family (politsovet.ru/55958-zhirinovskiy-prizval-pereimenovat-sverdlovskuyu-oblast.html
and nakanune.ru/news/2017/7/20/22476854/).
Other skirmishes in the monuments wars included: Yekaterinburg residents are
collecting money for a memorial to Osip Mandelshtam (politsovet.ru/55983-v-ekaterinburge-sobirayut-dengi-na-memorialnuyu-dosku-mandelshtamu.html),
an Irkutsk court is considering whether to allow statues of Admiral Kolchak to
remain in place (newsland.com/community/4765/content/irkutskii-sud-rassmotrit-isk-o-demontazhe-pamiatnikov-kolchaku/5922296),
a historian recalled that the Soviets considered renaming Moscow four times,
once for Lenin and three times for Stalin (back-in-ussr.com/2017/07/pochemu-v-sssr-tak-i-ne-pereimenovali-moskvu.html),
a statue of Lenin was beheaded in Pervouralsk (newizv.ru/news/incident/16-07-2017/lenin-bez-golovy-v-pervouralske-otorvali-golovu-s-pamyatnika-vozhdyu),
and residents in Stavropol are being offered a new drink, carbonated Stalin war
(newsland.com/community/7329/content/gazirovannyi-stalin-na-stavropole-torguiut-napitkom-vozhd/5918434).
One commentator has called for a truce in these wars, suggesting that all
toponyms and monuments should feature only cultural figures and not political
ones (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=596E827CBBD00).
17.
Russians Worried
about Increasing Number of Russian Women Marrying Chinese and Turks. Russians have
always been concerned about those of their number who marry foreigners, an act
they see as threatening to the cohesion of the Russian nation. Now, complaints
about this center on Russian women who choose to marry Chinese or Turkish men (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1500035820
and mk.ru/social/2017/07/13/chem-khoroshi-i-chem-plokhi-vostochnye-zhenikhi-dlya-rossiyanok.html).
18.
Zhirinovsky
Predicts Social Explosion in Russia. Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the flamboyant
head of the absurdly named Liberal Democratic Party of Russia but often a
bellwether of elite opinion, said this week that if the economic situation
continues to deteriorate, Russia will likely face a social explosion (newsland.com/community/1713/content/zhirinovskii-preduprezhdaet-vlast-o-sotsialnom-vzryve/5915970).
19.
Opposition to ‘Russian
Nation’ Law Intensifies. Ever more residents of the Russian Federation are
expressing their opposition to the draft Russian law that defines ethnic
Russians as the state-forming nation, viewing this as an indication that in Russia
today, “all citizens are equal but some are more equal than others” (kavkazr.com/a/vse-grazhdane-rf-ravny-no-nekotorye-ravnee/28616231.html).
20.
Defense of High
Pay for Deputies Sparks Debate. The defense last week of a decision by
one regional legislature to double their own salaries while leaving the pay of teachers
and the doctors where it was has sparked a lively debate across Russia about
who should get what and whether the government is responsive to the needs of the
people (ekb.dk.ru/news/mozhet-deputaty-poyasnyat-pochemu-oni-sdelali-sebe-samye-vysokie-zarplaty-v-mire-mnenie-237083913 and znak.com/2017-07-19/senator_skazavshiy_chto_deputaty_dolzhny_poluchat_bolshe_vrachey_ya_tak_ne_govoril).
21.
Average Russian
Bribe Now 10,000 US Dollars, Interior Ministry Says. The MVD says
that it has calculated that the average bribe in Russia now amounts to 614,000
rubles, almost exactly 10,000 US dollars at the current rate of exchange (newsland.com/community/8137/content/mvd-podschitalo-srednii-razmer-vziatki-v-moskve/5920634).
22.
If You Look at
Russia from Alaska, What You’ll See Isn’t Pretty. Those who suggest that they can “see Russia” from
Alaska would be horrified if they actually could by the sad state of affairs in
the Chukotka peninsula with its dying cities and impoverished people. For an
amazing collection of photographs comparing Chukotka and Alaska, see newsland.com/community/7996/content/aliaska-i-chukotka-nagliadnoe-sravnenie/5921152).
23.
International
Tribunal Orders Moscow to Pay 5.4 Million Euros for 2013 Seizure of Greenpeace
Ship. An international tribunal organized under the
auspices of the Law of the Sea Treaty has ordered Russia to pay 5.4 million
euros in compensation for its seizure of the Greenpeace ship, “Arctic Sunrise,”
in 2013 (thebarentsobserver.com/en/ecology/2017/07/russia-ordered-pay-eu54-million-seizing-arctic-sunrise-today-greenpeace-sails-vessel).
24. Russians Fearful Baikal Becoming ‘a Chinese Lake.’ Given Moscow’s agreement with Beijing to allow China
to take massive amounts of water from Russia’s most famous lake, many Russians
fear that their national treasure is becoming “a Chinese lake” and that that
trend presages even more loss of Russian control in Siberia and the Far East (newsland.com/user/1637669351/content/baikal-velikoe-ozero-kitaiskoi-strany/5922155 and newsbabr.com/baik/?IDE=162406).
25. Most Russians
Swear They Don’t Swear, New Poll Finds. A new survey finds Russians saying that
they don’t swear even though massive evidence shows that most do (themoscowtimes.com/news/most-russians-swear-they-dont-swear-58419).
26. 53 Russians Think Long Term about Living in a
Post-Putin Russia. Fifty-three Russians have frozen their bodies
so that they can be revived at some distant point in time, a reflection of
their apparent view that only then will things be better and of the fact that
there are massive problems with Russian cemeteries, including the fact that in
90 percent of them, no one is sure who owns them and thus how they may be
disposed of in the future (newizv.ru/news/tech/18-07-2017/s-nadezhdoy-na-voskreshenie-v-rossiyskom-kriohranilische-zamorozheny-53-cheloveka, iq.hse.ru/news/207677281.html and snob.ru/selected/entry/127107).
And 13 more from countries in Russia’s
neighborhood:
27.
Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania Lead Incomes in Post-Soviet Space. Estonia has the highest
average monthly income of any in the region, twice that of Russia which is in fourth
place and more than ten times that of Turkmenistan which is in last (newsland.com/community/5206/content/reiting-zarplat-stran-byvshego-sssr/5923058).
28. Russian Organized Crime Again Expanding in Ukraine,
Kyiv Officials Say.
Russian organized crime groups have increased their activities in Ukraine in
recent months, giving Moscow yet another lever against the Ukrainian government
(obozrevatel.com/crime/86793-rossijskij-kriminal-pustil-korni-v-ukraine.htm).
29.
Ukrainians
Officially Own Nearly One Million Guns, Unofficially Many More.
Ukrainians have legally registered ownership of more than 900,000 guns, Kyiv
officials say; but unofficially, there are likely three or four times that many
in private hands (dsnews.ua/politics/na-rukah-u-ukraintsev-ofitsialno-bolee-900-tysyach-stvolov--15072017211000).
30. Ukraine Ends Requirement that Documents Be Stamped. In yet another
small but significant step of moving away from Russian domination, Ukrainians no
longer need to have documents stamped by various officials as was the case in
Soviet times, according to a new regulation (qha.com.ua/ru/obschestvo/v-ukraine-bolshe-ne-trebuetsya-stavit-pechati-na-dokumenti/176221/).
31.
Minsk
Refuses Moscow’s Request to Supply Peacekeepers for Syria.
Belarus, following two Central Asian countries, has turned down Russian
requests for troops to back up Moscow’s “peacekeeping” operations in Syria (belaruspartisan.org/politic/387937/).
32.
Minsk Wants to
Exploit, Control Belarusian Diaspora. Minsk is reaching out to the four million
plus Belarusians living abroad in the hopes of using them to promote Minsk’s
policies but it is offending many by its heavy-handedness in dealing with them
(belsat.eu/ru/opinions/kakaya-diaspora-nuzhna-vlastyam/).
33.
Belarusians
Replacing Russians as Key Tourist Group in Ukraine. Ever fewer
Russians are travelling to Ukraine this summer, but ever more Belarusians are,
according to Kyiv statistics (newsland.com/community/5206/content/ukraina-nabiraet-populiarnost-u-turistov-iz-belarusi-rossiia-teriaet/5916658).
34.
Minsk Begins
Repaying Hated Vagrants Tax. The Belarusian government has begun repaying to its
citizens the vagrants tax that sparked protests earlier this year (newsland.com/community/8181/content/belorusam-nachali-vozvrashchat-uplachennyi-imi-nalog-na-tuneiadstvo/5920208).
35.
Armenian
Parliamentarians Reject Moscow’s Request to Make Russian State Language There.
Armenian deputies are outraged that Moscow would even consider requesting that
they make Russian a state language in their country (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/306276/).
36.
Turkmenistan Blocks
All Social Networks.
Turkmenistan, the most closed-off post-Soviet state, has now blocked all social
networks, including Russian ones, on its territory (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1500488880).
37.
Turkmen TV Now
Features Live Readings of President’s Books. Turkmen television viewers are being
given a special “treat.” TV channels there are featuring live readings of the
entire works of the country’s president for life (currenttime.tv/a/28626950.html).
38.
Tajikistan Wants
to Shift Outmigration from Russia to Arab World, Europe. Dushanbe, worried
about its dependence on remittances from Tajik gastabeiters in Russia, has
announced a program to promote those who want to work abroad to go to Arab
countries or Europe rather than Russia (migrant.ferghana.ru/newslaw/таджикистан-хочет-диверсифицировать.html).
39.
Kazakhstan Won’t
Ban Jehovah’s Witnesses. Unlike some former Soviet republics who tend to
follow Moscow’s lead especially when it comes to repressive measures,
Kazakhstan has announced that it will not ban the Jehovah’s Witnesses as Russia
has done (kazislam.kz/ru/songy-janalyktar/item/14072-kazakhstan-ne-planiruet-zapreshchat-svidetelej-iegovy).
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