Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 25 – Many Moscow
outlets are celebrating a Levada Center poll showing that Russians have become
more tolerant to representatives of other nationalities, but Aleksandr
Verkhhovsky of the SOVA Center suggests that this reflects less a real change
of heart than the result of the impact of television messages.
He points out that the government
has directed its powerful television outlets send a clear message that
xenophobic attitudes are wrong because “they are destructive and give rise to
conflicts,” something the Kremlin wants to avoid. People have learned that
expressing such attitudes is now unacceptable (kommersant.ru/doc/3391603).
But Aleksandr
Brod, head of the Presidential Council on Human Rights, is less upbeat. He says
that everyday xenophobia continues but that “aggressive anti-Western propaganda
forms a feeling of antipathy to the West up to the sense that we are living in
a besieged fortress. That intolerance spreads to others,” including sexual
minorities.
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