Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 21 -- 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 105th 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. Putin Says West Won 1917 Russian Revolution. Vladimir Putin
finally found a way to deal with the 1917 revolutions in Russia: he told the
Valdai conference that the West had won them because they had weakened Russia,
on the one hand, and introduced a certain social discipline into Western
capitalism, on the other (graniru.org/Politics/Russia/President/m.264899.html). While Putin is
set for re-election, ever more commentators in Russia say that the interesting
question is what Russia will be like in 2024 and who will finally succeed him
then (nakanune.ru/articles/113357/). Meanwhile, some
Russians are taking advantage of his incumbency by monetarizing his image and
even, according to one report, his distinctive smell (babr24.com/msk/?IDE=166182).
2.
‘A
Russian Election is When We Elect Putin.’
Russians have understood that despite all the hype about possible opponents,
the fix is in and “a Russian election is when we elect Putin,” in the words of
some (https://newsland.com/community/7149/content/vybory-eto-kogda-vybiraet-putin/6043878). At the same
time, some commentators are suggesting
that Putin can’t win an election because no such things actually occur in
Russia (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E6353D7360A). But Putin,
although undeclared, is acting like a candidate, adopting populist measures
like declaring he and other senior officials will take a pay cut (politikus.ru/v-rossii/100578-putin-prodlil-svoy-ukaz-o-snizhenii-zarplat-vysshim-chinovnikam-do-2019-goda.html) and apparently
definitively deciding that he won’t allow Aleksey Navalny to run against him (echo.msk.ru/news/2075648-echo.html). When the
Kremlin decided that its preferred opponent is Kseniya Sobchak, one observer
said that Russians should remember that “Caligual made his horse a senator” and
Putin himself said she could win because “in our country anything is possible”
(newsland.com/community/129/content/konia-na-prestol-ili-kandidat-kotorogo-my-zasluzhili/6043031 and themoscowtimes.com/news/he-didnt-say-hes-running-this-iswhat-putin-did-say-at-valday-59317).
Polls suggest she can’t possible: a majority of Russians say they don’t want a
woman president and 60 percent say they don’t like Sobchak (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E4F207E8086 and snob.ru/selected/entry/130329).
3.
Weinstein
Supplants Trump as US Person of Interest for Russians. The Russian media for the first time in weeks
devoted more attention to another American than to Donald Trump. Outlets
focused on the Harvey Weinstein scandal, with some Russian actresses actually
expressing support for the embattled movie mogul (https://themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-actress-faces-backlash-after-expressing-support-for-harvey-weinstein-59302), but most
Russians horrified if not always outspoken (republic.ru/posts/87137, theins.ru/news/75809, themoscowtimes.com/articles/why-russian-women-dont-want-to-talk-about-harvey-weinstein-59320 and themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-film-company-ceo-accuses-weinstein-of-sexual-harassment-59324). Not
surprisingly, Russian government media could not resist focusing on Weinstein’s
ties to the Clintons (ria.ru/analytics/20171020/1507263450.html). One reason for
this interest besides the obvious is that a new gender equality bill is before
the Duma, but Russian commentators suggest that will do little to improve the
situation Russian women now face (regnum.ru/news/polit/2336358.html).
4.
Trump Still
Celebrated as Pro-Russian, But Washington Said Behaving Like Weinstein. As for US
President Donald Trump, Putin still celebrated him as pro-Russian blocked by
but still effectively blocked in the pursuit of better relations by Russophobic
American elites (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/10/putin-blames-west-for-all-of-russias.html). And not surprisingly, one Moscow commentator
while upbeat about Trump attacked American diplomacy for “copying the behavior
of Harvey Weinstein” (vesti-ua.net/novosti/politika/49708-v-ssha-raskryli-realnuyu-poziciyu-trampa-po-ukraine.html).
5.
Putin’s
Personalist Dictatorship Preventing Russia from Attracting Investment. Putin’s
personalist dictatorship, one that requires an easily ruled archaic population,
has created conditions which make Russia highly unattractive for outside
investors, commentators say (ekhokavkaza.com/a/28805559.html and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E5B399EDCFE). Another Moscow
writer suggested that Putin is losing the support of the major cities and thus
is becoming “the president of the periphery” (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/10/18/266353/). Meanwhile,
Putin warned regional heads that he may dismiss more of them in the coming
weeks (politsovet.ru/56943-putin-predupredil-gubernatorov-o-novyh-otstavkah.html). But the Putin
system takes care of its own, finding a job for the recently dismissed head of
Daghestan – he’ll be a coordinator for Caspian policy – and allowing Culture
Minister Vladimir Medynsky to keep his degree despite his plagiarized
dissertation (kavpolit.com/articles/putin_naznachil_abdulatipova_spetsialnym_predstavi-36192/ and meduza.io/news/2017/10/20/interfaks-prezidium-vak-reshil-sohranit-uchenuyu-stepen-medinskogo).
6.
70 Percent of
Russian Government Spending ‘Useless.’ An expert examination of the Russian
government’s spending concludes that 70 percent of it doesn’t accomplish what
it intends, but of course it may have an unspoken goal: buying off Russian
elites (politsovet.ru/56881-70-gosudarstvennyh-rashodov-okazalis-bespoleznymi.html and rbc.ru/economics/13/10/2017/59dfa8f89a79471a6bc8a307). In related
developments, Russian officials are calling on Russians to bring their children
and parents back from abroad in order to serve the country (znak.com/2016-10-11/rossiyskim_chinovnikam_i_deputatam_rekomendovano_vernut_detey_i_roditeley_na_rodinu), the Russian
government has proposed a whistle blower protection law (politsovet.ru/56885-pravitelstvo-predlozhilo-zaschischat-rossiyan-soobschivshih-o-korrupcii.html),
and officials are facing new restrictions on leaving Russia or entering the US
(politsovet.ru/56883-rossiyskim-chinovnikam-i-deputatam-ogranichili-vezd-v-ssha.html and politsovet.ru/56917-buduschih-ministrov-zastavyat-otchitatsya-o-poezdkah-za-granicu.html). One intriguing
story this week was that some officials are trying to identify those Kremlin
officials who leak to the media and then are later proved to be inaccurate (thequestion.ru/questions/253652/kto-takie-istochniki-iz-kremlya-dayushie-zhurnalistam-informaciyu-kotoruyu-pozzhe-kreml-oprovergaet).
And then there was the news report that isn’t news: the Russian Parliament, one
writer said, is now “fully integrated” into Putin’s power vertical (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E63CFF080F2).
7.
After Brief
Uptick, Russian Industry Returns to ‘Negative Stagnation.’ After a brief “uptick” at the end of 2016 and
the start of 2017, as documented by Sergey Shelin (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2017/10/20/1654806.html), Russian
industrial production and economic growth has returned to “negative stagnation,”
i.e., it is declining not growing (kommersant.ru/doc/3440884).
Russian banks remain in trouble (themoscowtimes.com/articles/profit-of-russian-banking-sector-tanks-following-summer-bail-outs-59252),
foreign debt has increased 4.5 percent so far this year (newsland.com/community/6701/content/vneshnii-dolg-rossii-vyros-s-nachala-goda-na-45/6039350), few if any
factories in Russia have been opened under Putin’s rule (newsland.com/community/4109/content/skolko-zavodov-postroil-v-rossii-putin-otvet-dolbostukam/6039520), Moscow has been
forced to cut back spending for the much-hyped Northern Rail Route and postpone
the highspeed train connection between Moscow and Kazan (nakanune.ru/news/2017/10/17/22486270/ and
kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E6F79991E1C), people are
moving back into khrushchoby because
new housing isn’t being built as promised (newizv.ru/news/omy/18-10-2017/vozvraschenie-v-hruschevki-ploschad-kvartir-v-novostroykah-stremitelno-sokraschaetsya),
the collapse of investment is much worse than the government admits, experts
say and much less than in Soviet times (ng.ru/omics/2017-10-18/1_7097_iznos.html and ng.ru/omics/2017-10-18/100_fonds1810.html), regional
government project deficits 70 times those Moscow does (rbc.ru/newspaper/2017/10/19/59e7228f9a79474a1517e372), a new law
allows the government to make any road a paid highway (newsland.com/community/politic/content/liubaia-doroga-teper-smozhet-stat-platnoi/6040419),
fewer offices are being built (dom.lenta.ru/news/2017/10/19/office/?utm_source=from_lenta), and up to ten
Russian air carriers are said at the brink of bankruptcy (snob.ru/selected/entry/130400). And worse may
be ahead: experts say Russia is extremely poorly prepared to cope with future
challenges in comparison with other countries (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E87F8CEA965).
8.
20 Percent of
Russians Say Now is the Worst, but 40 Percent Say the Worst is Still Ahead. In a reprise of
the old Soviet joke about the difference between optimists and pessimists,
twice as many Russians say the worst is yet to come than say the country is now
in the worst shape ever economically (gazeta.ru/social/news/2017/10/16/n_10696730.shtml). There is reason
for their feelings: pensioners are finding out that the government will only
give them more after most are dead (agonia-ru.com/archives/12075), some analysts
say that half of the population now counts as poor (newsland.com/community/7948/content/bednost-v-rossii-ne-20-a-70-millionov-rossiian/6038451), 800,000 Russians are at the brink of
bankruptcy (lenta.ru/news/2017/10/18/bankrupts/), wage arrears
are rising in many parts of the country (regnum.ru/news/omy/2334939.html),
even the government admits real incomes have fallen since the start of 2017 (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E7823914647),
and the government’s three-year program shows little hope for the future (newsland.com/community/4788/content/biudzhet-na-trekhletku-govorit-o-skatyvanii-rossii-v-ekonomicheskuiu-iamu/6045077).
What is surprising is that one study has concluded that the Russian government
is contributing a higher share of the incomes of Russians now than did the
Soviet government under Brezhnev, with some 65 million Russians getting money
from the state (newsland.com/community/4109/content/vozmozhna-li-drugaia-rossiia/6041170).
9.
Desperate
Pensioner Asks Putin to Send Him a Coffin.
A Russian pensioner who said he was giving up because things are so bad
for him asked the Kremlin leader to just send him a casket so he could be
buried without expense to his family (newsland.com/community/5442/content/pensioner-obiasnil-zachem-poprosil-u-putina-grob-v-podarok-ustal-borotsia/6044507). In response,
the authorities found money to give him half of the pension he is supposed to
be receiving (m.lenta.ru/news/2017/10/19/vertiprahov/). Other social
news of note this week: some say Putin is methodically converting Russians into
“a nation of snitches” (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/10/20/russkih_metodichno_prevrawayut_v_naciyu_stukachej/), the government
wants to ban coverage of sex crimes against children (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E873F3E63AC), animal cruelty
is on the rise (newizv.ru/news/society/14-10-2017/epidemiya-nenavisti-kto-travit-sobak-povodyrey, newsland.com/community/2576/content/nalog-na-domashnikh-zhivotnykh-prinimaet-gosduma/6036553 and newsland.com/community/8029/content/v-tveri-usypili-bolee-200-sobak-chtoby-ne-tratitsia-na-ikh-soderzhanie/6037957), government bans
stories on social networks about riding on roofs of trams (znak.com/2017-10-14/roskomnadzor_potreboval_udalit_iz_socsetey_stranicy_o_zacepinge_i_rufinge),
one Duma deputy says condoms are a threat to Russian national security even as
some schools promote them (lenta.ru/news/2017/10/16/fas161017/ and .ng.ru/economics/2017-10-18/100_fonds1810.html), a moonshine
festival was held in Lipetsk (lenta.ru/articles/2017/10/16/lipetsk/), 20 young
Russians try to commit suicide for every one who succeeds (snob.ru/selected/entry/130127), Russian purchases
of sex toys are down but interest in bondage is up (lenta.ru/news/2017/10/17/impotenciya/ and
momenty.org/people/i178127/),
Russian wives are increasingly accusing their husbands of pedophilia (lenta.ru/articles/2017/10/17/pedo/),
and one Duma deputy wants to legally ban any Russian from celebrating Halloween
(newsland.com/community/5134/content/milonov-poprosil-zapretit-shkolam-i-detskim-sadam-otmechat-khellouin/6042756). Meanwhile, the
interior ministry says that there are now 2.6 million illegal immigrants in
Russia (takiedela.ru/news/2017/10/20/mvd-nelegali/).
10.
Moscow Proud It
has Cut Number of Hospital Beds. Most governments express regret if
economic conditions force them to cut the number of hospital beds available to
their citizens, but Russia is different. There, the health ministry announced
that the reduction in the number of such beds was the most important thing it had
accomplished recently (newsland.com/community/1841/content/minzdrav-nazval-sokrashchenie-bolnichnykh-koek-vazhneishim-napravleniem-svoei-raboty/6045080). The result of
Putin’s infamous “optimization” program, these cutbacks have led some to call
the Russian healthcare system today “a conveyer of death” (regnum.ru/news/society/2334585.html) and sparked
calls for doctors to protest, even as the best of them are being forced out of
the system entirely by sizeable paycuts (newsland.com/community/5392/content/luchshikh-vrachei-vygoniaiut-na-pochetnuiu-pensiiu/6044482 , .svoboda.org/a/28794118.html and politsovet.ru/56896-schetnaya-palata-v-byudzhete-ne-hvatit-deneg-na-zarplaty-vracham.html).
But that isn’t the only threat to health in Russia. A Urals city mayor has told
his citizens that well water there may kill fish but it is entirely safe for
people (newsru.com/russia/18oct2017/water.html),
environmentalists say that pollution is killing an entire Russian city (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/10/20/74267-krik-otravlennogo-goroda),and this past
year, Russia rose to one of the top ten countries in the world in terms of
deaths caused by heat (kommersant.ru/doc/3114331). The country’s
ambulance system isn’t working in many places (newsland.com/community/4765/content/podarok-moskovskikh-vlastei-permiaki-priznali-ugrozoi-dlia-zhizni/6041068), and there is no
insulin in places for children for need it (ura.news/news/1052309173). Moreover,
everyone but the Russian government considers the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Russia
to be a catastrophe (ng.ru//2017-10-18/100_spid181017.html). There is a
rising tide of dementia and a hepatitis A outbreak in the northern capital (lenta.ru/articles/2017/10/16/dementia/ and regnum.ru/news/society/2336409.html). And ethnic
Russian regions continue to outpace Muslim ones in alcohol consumption and
alcohol-related deaths (regnum.ru/news/society/2334483.html).
11.
Moscow
Miscalculates in Banning Azerbaijani Organization in Russia. The Russian
government declared the main Azerbaijani organization in Russia a foreign agent,
effectively banning it; but the Azerbaijanis of Russia took the obvious step:
they have now united with the Turkish organization there, creating a new and
very different problem for the Russian authorities (onkavkaz.com/novosti/3276-turki-i-azerbaidzhancy-rossii-obedinjayutsja.html). In other ethnic news, three Finno-Ugric
peoples near St. Petersburg are said headed toward extinction (regnum.ru/news/society/2334022.html), Moscow’s
promises notwithstanding, the number of schools in Chechnya with three shifts
has now risen to 45, a reflection of the baby boom there (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/311181/),
Chechnya’s Ramzan Kadyrov continues to raise his profile by travelling to
Tashkent and meeting the Uzbekistan president (islamsng.com/uzb/news/13510), Russian officials want to cut Daghestani
language instruction from three hours a week to one and have ordered the
Tatarstan nationalist group VTOTs to conduct its sessions at least in part in
Russian (kavkazr.com/a/28800079.html and idelreal.org/a/28802317.html), Ingush elders
are calling for the restoration of elected governors (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/311289/), and Russia’s
Sberbank plans to introduce shariat banking in the North Caucasus (kavkazr.com/a/severny-kavkaz-banki-shariat/28802066.html).
12.
Moscow Continues
to Oppress Jehovah’s Witnesses, Goes After Mormons and Scientologists Too. Having launched
its campaign against the Jehovah’s Witnesses, the Russian government is now
going after Mormons and Scientologists as well, even suggesting that it will
remove children from the homes of followers of these “sects” (politsovet.ru/56915-verhovnyy-sud-predlozhil-lishat-sektantov-roditelskih-prav.html, sova-center.ru//news/harassment/intervention/2017/06/d37374/ and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E5F3FA48695). (A religious
affairs expert has pointed out that Protestantism in Russia has always been
very different than it is in Europe (ng.ru/ng_religii/2017-10-18/13_430_together.html). In other
religious news, some say that the Russian Orthodox Church is providing the
shock troops for Putin’s conservative revolution (ng.ru/ng_religii/2017-10-18/14_430_arhaisation.html), the Moscow
Patriarchate is building churches rathe rather than clinics in Moscow (newsland.com/community/8211/content/khramy-vmesto-poliklinik-v-moskve-postroiat-eshche-28-tserkvei-dlia-borby-s-revoliutsionnymi-besami/6039723), but the Russian
church has been attacked by some for its willingness to cooperate with Finnish
churches (gorod-812.ru/zachem-rpts-reshila-druzhit-s-finnami-nesmotrya-na-gey-braki-zhenshhin-svyashhennikov/). A Muslim leader has complained of a serious
mullah shortage, noting that most mullahs in Russia are over 60 (interfax-.ru/?act=news&div=68429). Perm Orthodox
have complained to Putin about Hasidic plans to build a center there (periscop.prpc.ru/news/2688-171016), and Russian
Jewish leaders say that many Jews in Russia still prefer not to advertise their
identity. According to one, it is best to measure the number of Jews by the one
million who buy matso rather than the 270,000 who tell census takers they are
Jewish (cursorinfo.co.il/chislo-evreev-v-rossii-opredelili-po-potrebleniyu-matsy/).
13.
Had the USSR
Fallen into 50 Pieces, Most Would have Integrated with the West, Regionalists
Say.
Had the Soviet Union disintegrated further, most of the pieces, not constrained
by existing communist party organizations and structures, would have
successfully transformed themselves into democracies and integrated into the
West, according to Russian regionalists (maxpark.com/community/3550/content/6037634). That is one of
the reasons the Putin regime is afraid of them: this week it blocked a
prominent regionalist site (freeural.org/nas-blokirujut-v-rossii/). Other
regionalist developments included: the finding that Muscovites dislike
provincial Russians in much the same way the latter dislike them (snob.ru/profile/9723/blog/129841), reports later
denied said that Moscow as taking so much granite from Siberia that there was
none left for Siberian gravestones (themoscowtimes.com/news/siberian-funeral-homes-deny-moscow-construction-caused-tombstone-shortage-59330 and meduza.io/feature/2017/10/19/v-moskve-ulozhili-bolshe-granita-chem-dobyvayut-v-rossii-iz-za-etogo-v-sibiri-defitsit-kamnya-dlya-nadgrobiy), the first
Russian sentenced for separatism was freed but promises to continue to promote
regionalist issues in the Kuban (freeural.org/muzhestvennaja-darja-poljudova/ and freeural.org/za-kubanskij-narod-za-ego-nezavisimost/), Karelia became
the first region to acknowledge that it lacks the funds to make social payments
(znak.com/2017-10-19/pervyy__v_rossii_priznal_chto_u_nego_net_deneg_na_povyshenie_zarplat_byudzhetnikam), Volgograd wants
a referendum to go off Moscow time (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/311341/),
some say wage arrears are the new symbol of the Russian Far East (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/10/18/74245-simvol-rossii-dolgi-po-zarplate), ethnic tensions
in that region may heat up if the Duma decides to give settlers ten free
hectares rather than one (http://fedpress.ru/article/1877688), people in the
Urals are becoming conscious of the losses their region is taking in the Syrian
war (freeural.org/uralcy-v-sirii/), and people of
the Urals now insist that they speak Urals, not Russian (freeural.org/uralskij-jazyk/).
Finally, Natalya Zubarevich, one of Moscow’s leading authorities on the
regions, says that Putin’s policy is to try to convince Russians that no
autonomy is needed (themoscowtimes.com/articles/the-fall-of-russias-al-governors-59270).
14.
St. Petersburgers
Protesting More than Muscovites. Moscow is no longer the center of
protests; the Northern capital is,
surveys suggest (gorod-812.ru/o-roli-peterburga-v-noy-istorii/); and while they
seldom get as much attention, other cities are becoming hubs of more or less
constant protests on various subjects (openrussia.org/notes/714857/). Among this week’s protest news, 49 people who
picketed in support of the Crimean Tatars were detained (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E30D3081BF9), Vladikavkaz
residents protested against the sale of energy drinks (onkavkaz.com/novosti/3271-vo-vladikavkaze-proshel-miting-protiv-energeticheskih-napitkov.html), Altay residents
protested against mistreatment of various kinds (newsland.com/community/4788/content/bolnichnyi-genotsid/6035124), sellers in
Makhachkala’s markets protested against restrictions on their operation (chernovik.net/content/lenta-novostey/na-centralnoy-ploshchadi-mahachkaly-prohodit-ocherednaya-akciya-a), and workers in
Perm and Orenburg struck to seek the recovery of unpaid back wages (forum-msk.org/material/news/13836050.html).
15.
Russia Jails More
and Recidivism Remains Extremely High. Russia is sending more people to jail
than in the past and sentencing them to longer terms, but recidivism is
extremely high – more than 47 percent of convicts commit new crimes on release
far higher than in Western countries (ttolk.ru/2017/10/16/россия-и-европа-рецидив-и-огромные-сро/). Other domestic
security news this week included reports that former FSB officers are now
working for Russian companies to engage in espionage both at home and abroad (lenta.ru/articles/2017/10/18/corporatespy/), the Supreme
Court has called for a new law that will expedite declaring materials extremist
(sova-center.ru/misuse/publications/2017/10/d38082/), Russian police
can now stop people more often and in more places under new rules (thequestion.ru/questions/194546/kak-sotrudniki-gibdd-opredelyayut-kogo-nado-tormoznut), the interior
ministry wants to make gay propaganda crime and one deputy minister wants to
ban the latest issue of Playboy which
has a transvestite on its cover (politsovet.ru/56942-mvd-predlagaet-vvesti-ugolovnuyu-otvetstvennost-za-gey-propagandu.html
and regnum.ru/news/society/2336372.html). The Duma may
make falsification of financial documents a crime (gazeta.ru/business/2017/10/16/10945148.shtml),
the first Russia is charged with offending the feelings of atheists (politsovet.ru/56923-v-rossii-vpervye-vozbudili-ob-oskorblenii-ateistov.html),
the Russian Guard is fitting itself out with new electroshock shields (newsland.com/community/129/content/dlia-rosgvardii-izgotovili-shchity-so-vstroennym-elektroshokerom/6044001), poison was used
in attack on Yuliya Latynina (ixtc.org/2017/10/yuliyu-latyninu-pytalis-ubit/), oppressions
continue against Navalny demonstrators with teachers and parents warned against
allowing minors to participate in protests (ixtc.org/2017/10/prodolzhayutsya-presledovaniya-storonnikov-alekseya-navalnogo/, znak.com/2017-10-17/v_mvd_predlagayut_karat_uchiteley_za_uchastie_shkolnikov_v_akciyah_protesta
and politsovet.ru/56911-mvd-predlagaet-nakazyvat-roditeley-za-uchastie-ih-detey-v-mitingah.html),
and one nationalist commentator calls for a massive purge of gays and defeatist
at home to make Russian army invincible (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/10/17/armiya_bez_krepkogo_tyla_budet_bita/).
16.
Telephone Terror,
Violence Continue as Moscow Angers Siloviki Veterans. Evacuations continued across Russia with thousands being
forced to leave schools, businesses, government offices and other facilities in
many cities (regnum.ru/news/accidents/2334547.html, politsovet.ru/56914-v-ekaterinburge-evakuirovali-urfu.html, kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59EA41F49F66D,
kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/311053/,
business-gazeta.ru/article/360845
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E5F8761DAC2).
Central media continued to remain mostly silent about these events, except to
report that the Duma was considering a measure to increase criminal penalties
for those making bomb threats to ten years in prison (echo.msk.ru/news/2076332-echo.html).
Meanwhile, more illegal guns were found and the number of guns used in the
commission of crimes increased this week (lenta.ru/articles/2017/10/20/guns/,
kavpolit.com/articles/v_dagestane_nashli_shron_s_oruzhiem_i_boepripasami-36197/,
regnum.ru/news/accidents/2334467.html
and ansar.ru/society/v-moskve-ubili-migranta-za-200-rublej). But Moscow’s problems also extended to the
siloviki, both pensioners and new draftees. More tha 600 retired siloviki have
been driven from their apartments in Tyumen and are said ready to protest (ura.news/articles/1036272677),
and only a third of the new draftees are fit for assignment in all positions
open (regnum.ru/news/society/2334996.html). Draft avoidance via corruption remains very much a
problem, although efforts to crack down on it have led those who want to avoid
service to adopt new techniques (lenta.ru/articles/2017/10/19/prizyv/).Meanwhile,
a commentator has pointed out the obvious: the secrecy under which the FSB
operates routinely allows its officers to engage in illegal and corrupt
activities (versia.ru/pod-senyu-fsb).
17. ’If Moscow’s Goals in Syria are So Noble, Why Hide Its
Role There or Fail to Aid Its Soldiers?’
Russians are beginning to ask why Moscow is using mercenaries in Syria if its
goals are as noble as it says they are and why it is refusing to help Russians
caught by others (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E78FDE17779 and newsland.com/community/4765/content/rossiia-otkazalas-oplatit-advokata-zaderzhannomu-v-ukraine-kontraktniku-ageevu/6044663). Commentators are pointing out that massive
corruption in the Russian defense establishment is undercutting Russia’s
national defense (iz.ru/657805/ivan-petrov-konstantin-bogdanov/rastashchili-na-otkaty) and pointing
out that Russia doesn’t have sufficient funds to genuinely modernize its fleet
as the US is doing (gazeta.ru/army/2017/10/15/10944080.shtml). In other news, persons unknown threw a smoke bomb
at the NATO information office in Moscow (vedomosti.ru/politics/news/2017/10/13/737837-zdanie-informatsionnogo), and the US announced that it is now testing a
rocket engine that will replace the ones it had been buying from the Russians (rbc.ru/technology_and_media/20/10/2017/59e9b0689a79476a49a0a0b9?from=main).
18. Monuments Going Up for Everything from Homeless
Animals to Cruise Missiles. This week, monuments were going up for
homeless dogs (newsland.com/community/4765/content/pamiatnik-bezdomnoi-sobake-poiavilsia-v-iakutske/6036940), for an Orthodox doctor priest who died in the
GULAG (http://rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=79205),
and for grieving mothers whose children
were in the Soviet camps (nazaccent.ru/content/25693-azerbajdzhancy-vosstanovili-pamyatnik-skorbyashaya-mat-v.html).
Plans were announced for a new Moscow monument in honor of Russian cruise
missiles (svpressa.ru/society/news/183589/).
The Orthodox Church has given up on its much-opposed plan to build a cathedral
on the waters in Yekaterinburg (http://www.interfax-religion.ru/?act=news&div=68411
and ura.news/articles/1036272644).
The Kalashnikov monument sculptor has refused to make requested modifications
in his design (newsland.com/community/7451/content/avtor-pamiatnika-kalashnikovu-otkazalsia-ispravliat-oshibku-na-monumente/6041893).
Russians say Ukrainians plan to blow up a Rostov monument to Donbass heroes (rostovgazeta.ru/news/politics/19-10-2017/pamyatniku-geroyam-donbassa-v-rostove-ugrozhayut-ukrainskie-aktivisty-07a083f1-b343-485c-b8e1-61be3f7c0243).
Natalya Poklonskaya asks procuracy to declare Mathilda extremist (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59E62D5A40C83).
The authorities have so far refused but they have made it an adults only movie
to limit attendance (newsland.com/community/5625/content/roskomnadzor-opredelil-dlia-matildy-sushchestvennoe-ogranichenie/6041017).
And the Russian Orthodox Church has put up billboards in St. Petersburg like
those in Moscow and Yekaterinburg that contain quotations from the last tsar (gorod-812.ru/rpts-ukrasit-peterburg-reklamoy-svyatyih-nikolaya-ii/).
19.
Kremlin Says US Trying
to Exclude Russia from Olympics. The Kremlin says that the US is behind
efforts to get the IOC to keep Russians from participating in the next Olympiad
(lenta.ru/news/2017/10/20/kremlinmok/).
To underscore its anger, the Russian government has invited the disgraced head
of FIFA to attend the World Cup competition next year (themoscowtimes.com/news/disgraced-fifa-head-blatter-to-accept-putins-world-cup-invite-59329). Meanwhile, in other sports developments, a former
Soviet Olympian says she was raped by her partner (newsland.com/community/7245/content/olimpiiskaia-chempionka-obvinila-partnera-po-sbornoi-sssr-v-iznasilovanii/6041759 and https://newsland.com/community/4375/content/v-sovetskom-sporte-seksa-net/6042430),
more Russian athletes have been disqualified for doping (echo.msk.ru/news/2075670-echo.html),
ISIS threatens terrorist attacks against World Cup venues in Russia next year (lenta.ru/news/2017/10/17/ismenace/), and the mayor of Kaliningrad, one of those venues,
has called on residents to leave the city during the competition and, if they
must remain, to avoid hitting foreign visitors (newsland.com/community/4765/content/mer-kaliningrada-poprosil-zhitelei-pokinut-gorod-na-vremia-chm-2018-i-ne-bit-inostrantsev/6042207).
20.
Russians Remember
Foreign Events, Forget Those at Home. Unlike most nations and reflecting the
focus of the Moscow media, Russians are more inclined to remember events that
have happened beyond the borders of their country than those within them (themoscowtimes.com/news/most-russians-forget-incidents-at-home-but-remember-those-abroad-59315).
21.
A Russian Exit
from Council of Europe Would Leave Russians Without Last Line of Defense. It would be
disastrous for Russian if Moscow leaves the Council of Europe and continues to
ignore the decisions of the European Court for Human Rights, the last line of
defense of Russian rights, according to Moscow lawyers (theins.ru/opinions/74630 and agitpro.su/rossiya-sbrasyvaet-s-sebya-yarmo-zapadnogo-iga/). But besides the decisions the court has
made against Russia, Vladimir Putin may have another reason for wanting to
avoid hearings in that court. Earlier, cases took years to work their way
through the system; now they are often decided in one or two, thus meaning that
the political impact of the cases inside Russia is greater (facebook.com/trudolubov/posts/1683893478295797).
22. Putin May Want to Return to the Recent Past, But Some
Russians Want to Go Back a Millenium. There is much debate about just how far
Vladimir Putin wants to take Russia backwards, but about others who would like
to return Russia to pre-Christian times, there can’t be any. These groups
recently held a congress to promote Russian life of 1,000 years ago (ipesi.ru/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=22).
23.
Descendants of
White Emigres Won’t Come to Terms with Bolsheviks. The descendants of Russians who fought the
Reds during the Russian Civil War before being forced into emigration have no
interest in coming to terms with the Bolsheviks and their descendants in power,
one of their number told Le Monde (lemonde.fr/international/article/2017/10/12/l-impossible-reconciliation-des-russes-blancs_5199696_3210.html?xtmc=russie&xtcr=1).
24. Ever More Senior Russian Officers are Getting Their
Own Coats of Arms. One
little noticed consequence of Vladimir Putin’s push toward the archaic is that
ever more senior generals and defense ministry officials are choosing to get
their own coats of arms, with some even reportedly interested in obtaining
patents of nobility (svpressa.ru/war21/article/183244/).
25.
Russian Governors
Now Setting Up Troll Operations of Their Own.
The efforts of Russian government trolls to set one group of Americans
against another have attracted enormous attention internationally (meduza.io/en/feature/2017/10/15/an-ex-st-petersburg-troll-speaks-out
and themoscowtimes.com/news/kremlin-troll-factory-methods-and-f
igures-revealed-59289). But they have
also attracted attention within Russia with some regional heads setting up
their own troll operations to go after their opponents (afterempire.info/2017/10/15/troll/).
26.
Chukchis Wish Tsar
had Sold Their Land to Americans When Alaska Was. Chukchis, who live just across the Bering
Strait from Alaska and have some knowledge how much poorer they are than the
people on the other side – a new report finds that the region is producing ever
less electricity because of economic declione (forum-msk.org/material/news/13855538.html)
– are ever more often expressing regret that their land wasn’t sold to the US
when Alaska was 150 years ago (http://www.dsnews.ua/world/ekaterina-tut-voobshche-ni-pri-chem--18102016100000).
And
13 more from countries in Russia’s neighborhood:
1. Kyiv Documents Crimes of Russian Mercenaries for the
UN.
The Ukrainian government has presented a report to the UN documenting the
numerous crimes by pro-Moscow Russian mercenaries in the Donbass and in Syria (apostrophe.ua/news/world/europe/2017-10-19/ukraina-prezentovala-v-es-doklad-o-prestupleniyah-rossiyskih-naemnikov-na-donbasse-i-v-sirii-foto/110668). Ukrainian activists
have also reported that the number of Ukrainians in Russian prisons in Russia
and in occupied Crimea has risen dramatically in recent weeks (khpg.org/en/index.php?id=1507661944). And a new mortal
directed at Crimea tells pro-Ukrainian Crimeans that the rest of Ukraine has
not forgotten about them (ru.krymr.com/a/28799350.html).
2. Kyiv Ends All
Trade with Russia of Military Goods. More than
three years after Russia invaded Ukraine, Kyiv has blocked all trade with that
country involving military products or component parts (http://gordonua.com/news/politics/kabmin-prekratil-deystvie-soglasheniya-s-rossiey-o-predpriyatiyah-uchastvuyushchih-v-proizvodstve-produkcii-voennogo-naznacheniya-212871.html).
3.
Ukrainian
Politicians Urge Belarus to Reduce Use of Russian Language There.
Ukrainian deputies have urged the Belarusian authorities and people to reduce
their use of Russian to enhance national security (politikus.ru/events/100596-vice-spiker-rady-posovetovala-belorussii-otkazatsya-ot-russkogo-yazyka.html and facebook.com/iryna.gerashchenko/posts/1505547249533083?pnref=story).
4. Dedovshchina Death in Belarusian Army Sparks Outrage
and Calls for Defense Minister to Quit. More than any event since Alyaksandr
Lukashenka attempted to impose taxes on those who do not have jobs, the death
of a Belarusian soldier in peacetime as a result of mistreatment by fellow
soldiers and their commanders has sparked widespread outrage in Belarus and
sparked demands that the defense minister be ousted (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/10/15/266017/, belsat.eu/ru/in-focus/mat-ubitogo-soldata-oni-ego-raspyali-kak-iisusa-hrista/ and charter97.org/ru/news/2017/10/17/266241/).
It has already led one commentator there to say that the soldier’s death means
that Belarusians now will cease to be silent (belaruspartisan.org/life/398091/).
5.
Belarus Faces
Increasing Demographic Problems. The age Belarusians marry has risen dramatically
over the last year, a trend that suggests already low birthrates will fall
still further (thinktanks.by/publication/2017/10/14/ko-dnyu-materi-v-belarusi-vnov-obnarodovali-zhenskuyu-statistiku.html). A new study
identified that younger Belarusians are now leaving the country in increasing
numbers, with the largest number going to Russia and the second largest to the US
(thinktanks.by/publication/2017/10/15/top-6-stran-v-kotorye-uezzhayut-trudovye-migranty-iz-minska.html). New data also
shows that there are significant regional differences in Belarus regarding drug
use and mortality rates (thinktanks.by/publication/2017/10/18/reyting-samyh-smertelnyh-i-narkozavisimyh-regionov-belarusi.html).
6.
New Synagogue
Opens in Vitebsk.
Vitebsk, once a center of Jewish life in eastern Europe with more than 100
synagogues before World War I, has celebrated the opening of the first new one
in decades (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/10/17/266310/).
7.
311 Cruise Ships
Bring Half a Million Visitors to Tallinn This Year. Estonia’s capital has become an important
cruise destination with some 311 cruise ships docking there this season
bringing some 500,000 visitors to the city (facebook.com/groups/654799607943640/permalink/1459660057457587/).
8.
Latvian Government
to Stop Using Transliterations of Russian Names for Ukrainian Places. Riga has
announced that from now on it will transliterate the names of Ukrainian places
from Ukrainian not via Russian as in the past and thus will write Kyiv and not Kiev
(spektr.press/news/2017/10/19/v-latyshskom-yazyke-izmenili-pravopisanie-nazvanij-nekotoryh-ukrainskih-gorodov/).
9.
China to Build
University in Tajikistan. In yet another display of its reach into Central
Asia, Beijing has announced that it will open a national university in the
Tajikistan capital of Dushanbe (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/311113/).
10.
Internet Too
Expensive for Most Turkmens. The repressive Turkmenistan government doesn’t have
to restrict access to the Internet by fiat. The prices for Internet service
there, now among the top five among the countries of the world, are far beyond
the capacity of all but the wealthiest Turkmens to afford (fergananews.com/news/27055).
11.
Growing
Unhappiness among Turkmen Elites Reported. More reports are reaching the
outside world that elites in Turkmenistan, one of the most repressive countries
in the former Soviet space, are increasingly unhappy with the country’s
president and his policies, attitudes that could prove fateful given challenges
from neighboring Afghanistan (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1507969380).
12.
Tensions between
Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan on the Rise.
The two formerly nomadic nations have been engaged in an escalating war
of words with each side accusing the other of being responsible for a sharp
deterioration of relations and Kyrgyzstan’s president declaring that Astana is
destroying the Eurasian Union by introducing the Latin script in place of
Cyrillic (www.turantoday.com/2017/10/atambayev-nazarbayev-eurasian-union.html and centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1508360580). Moscow has
intervened diplomatically and Kyrgyzstan appears to be backing down (fergananews.com/news/27056).
13.
Tajikistan Arrests
Jehovah’s Witnesses for Refusing Military Service. Following
Russia’s campaign against the religious group, Tajikistan has felt free to
arrest a group of Tajik Jehovah’s Witnesses for refusing to serve in the
military, something that violates their principles (fergananews.com/news/27074).
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