Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 4-- 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 107th 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 on the Hijab. Chechen fashion
designers have come up with a new style: hijabs and other objects of Muslim
dress featuring pictures of Vladimir Putin (moslenta.ru/govoryat/-ne-khuzhe-mikki-mausa.htm?utm_source=from_lenta). Meanwhile, a group of Russian
psychologists says that fewer than one Russian in five has the ability to think
critically about the information flowing by; the rest, it adds, are prepared to
support Vladimir Putin (psychologies.ru/self-knowledge/behavior/tolko-17-rossiyan-mogut-kriticheski-vosprinimat-informatsiyu/). Putin attracted attention this week by suggesting
that Western agents were trying to steal Russians’ biological materials, a
statement that prompted much hilarity by Russian experts but led the Duma to go
into action to ban such seizures and thus protect “the biological security of
Russians” (newsland.com/community/4765/content/v-gosdumu-budet-vnesion-zakonoproekt-o-biologicheskoi-bezopasnosti-grazhdan-rossii/6060432). In another comment, Putin said that he didn’t see
any hysteria or obscurantism around him in Russia (znak.com/2017-10-30/prezident__ne_uvidel_isterii_i_mrakobesiya_v_rossiyskih_realiyah). Other Putin
news this week includes: one commentator suggests that Putin is rapidly
becoming both tsar and Rasputin (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59FC735A883AC),
another says that he is the embodiment of national unity (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/11/03/_olicetvorenie_narodnogo_edinstva/),
a Russian hockey star in the US is forming a group to campaign for Putin (lenta.ru/news/2017/11/03/_team/),
a Kamchatka caricaturist says drawing Putin is boring (sibreal.org/a/28786366.html),
and in another Potemkin-style move, Chelyabinsk officials arrested and expelled
the homeless in advance of a Putin visit (ura.news/news/1052310891).
2.
Russian Election
Degenerates into a Reality Show. With the addition of a porn actress and
other minor players, the Russian presidential elections, the outcome of which
has never been in doubt, have degenerated into a bad reality show (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2017/10/27/1656544.html
and dsnews.ua/world/predvybornyy-balagan-kak-chestnaya-pornoaktrisa-pomogla-03112017220000)
and made Russians even more skeptical about the possibilities for any positive
change (politsovet.ru/57029-rossiyane-ne-veryat-v-peremeny-v-strane.html
and ria.ru/society/20171027/1507674690.html). Nonetheless, the campaign continued, with Aleksey
Navalny, who has been denied a place on the ballot, filing a longshot suit
against Putin (spektr.press/news/2017/11/03/navalnyj-podal-v-sud-na-putina/
and znak.com/2017-11-03/istochnik_isk_navalnogo_k_putinu_ne_imeet_sudebnyh_perspektiv),
and Kseniya Sobchak suffering from doubts as to whether she is a real candidate
or a prop for Putin (thinktanks.by/publication/2017/11/03/pochti-polovina-rossiyan-ne-schitaet-sobchak-samostoyatelnoy-politicheskoy-figuroy.html)
or a Russian version of Donald Trump(echo.msk.ru/programs/personalno/2083224-echo/),
while staking out positions designed to attract more attention than anything
else (thinktanks.by/publication/2017/10/26/7-tsitat-sobchak-o-belarusi-i-lukashenko.html , kp.ru/daily/26750.5/3779672/
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59F32CBB44205).
3.
Putin Fires
Rockets as Oligarchs Fear Economic ‘Armageddon’ Next February. Russian
oligarchs increasingly fear that the new round of US sanctions scheduled to go
into force next February will be their “Armageddon” (profile.ru/economics/item/121027-biznes-armageddon-2-fevralya).
To try to show that Russia still matters, Vladimir Putin launched four missiles
in what some see as a response to the sanctions (forum-msk.org/material/power/13887695.html). Moscow’s troll factory as expected denies
involvement in US elections (themoscowtimes.com/news/alleged-mastermind-of-kremlin-troll-factory-denies-involvement-in-us-elections-59463)
even as the Russian foreign ministry uses its own fake to make false claims
about Hillary Clinton (https://themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-foreign-ministry-spokeswoman-cites-fake-bin-laden-visit-to-slam-manafort-indictment-59459)
and watches the indictments against Trump associates with concern (themoscowtimes.com/news/kremlin-following-russia-probe-that-saw-manafort-indicted-with-interest-59412).
One Russian commentator suggested that Trump is “an American Yanukovich” (ria.ru/analytics/20171102/1507988689.html),
but a Russian Jewish leader suggested that “loser” is not a Russian word and
shouldn’t be used, as it has been by Trump and others about him (torah.ru/article/73693/).
4.
Putin Softens the
Blow to Governors He Ousted. Vladimir
Putin’s hybridity sometimes leads to the sending of mixed messages. While
insisting that he was punishing governors who had not measured up in one way or
another by dismissing them, the Kremlin leader then turned about and asked them
to help their successors and said he would reward them (kommersant.ru/doc/3458703 and newsland.com/community/politic/content/putin-poobeshchal-nagradit-uvolennykh-gubernatorov/6062851). The Kremlin also injected yet more money into its
television propaganda effort (sobkorr.ru/news/59F58BFBE77C8.html),
even as ever more voices have been raised calling for genuine self-government
at the regional and local level (afterempire.info/2017/11/03/self-government/).
5.
Russian Central
Bank Will Save Only Other Banks Too Big to Fail. Russia has
acquired its own “too big to fail” problem with the Central Bank declaring that
it won’t try to save all banks but only the very largest – and most politically
well-connected – ones (sobkorr.ru/news/59F6DA729C3CC.html). Scholars at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics
confirmed that Russia is sliding rapidly into ever deeper stagnation (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59FB1AB496C64)
and the finance ministry says that Moscow should finance its budget deficits by
borrowing (iz.ru/662229/inna-grigoreva/minfinu-posovetovali-uvelichit-gosdolg).
Meanwhile, in a highly visible infrastructure failure, the cargo terminal at a
Moscow airport that the Kremlin had held up as a breakthrough project collapsed
before being put into operation (versia.ru/dolgozhdannoe-otkrytie-gruzovogo-terminala-ooo-kargo-moskva-zakonchilos-polnym-kollapsom).
6.
Russians Lack the
Money to File for Bankruptcy. Russians who should file for bankruptcy
are now so deep in the whole that they can’t afford to pay lawyers and court
fees to do so, thus keeping filings lower than they should be (rosbalt.ru/moscow/2017/11/01/1657644.html).
Russians’ standard of living continued to fall for the 35th month in
a row (newsland.com/community/4109/content/padenie-urovnia-zhizni-v-rossii-prodolzhaetsia-35-i-mesiats-podriad/6055856),
more than three million Russians are unemployed with more expected in coming
weeks (znak.com/2017-10-28/rossiyskie_vlasti_obyavili_o_gryaduchey_bezrabotice).
Russian elites see talking about patriotism as a way to distract poorer
Russians from complaints (svpressa.ru/society/article/185120/).
Milk has risen in price and Russians are cutting back their purchases of that
essential food (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59FC10A586643).
Medical prices and the cost of communal services are projected to jump after
the elections (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59F6F69EF0E54
and echo.msk.ru/news/2084282-echo.html).
And Russians are asking why they didn’t get more of the oil wealth than they
did (politikus.ru/video/101143-pochemu-rossiya-ne-saudovskaya-araviya-ili-gde-moi-neftedollary.html).
7.
Most Russians Lack
the Skills and Habits the Russian Economy Needs. Eighty percent
of Russians lack the skills and habits needed for a modern economy (newsland.com/community/4765/content/u-rossiian-obnaruzhili-massovuiu-nekompetentnost/6060222), and Russia is projected to have a shortfall of ten
million professionals in the next decade (politikus.ru/v-rossii/100920-upravlenie-talantami-gde-vzyat-10-millionov-professionalov-dlya-novoy-ekonomiki.html).
In other social developments, attacks on migrants have not ended (rus.azattyk.org/a/28816756.html/), Russian prostitutes complain that the
police are their worst and most violent customers (snob.ru/selected/entry/130619), increasing numbers of unmarried people
living together are drawing fire from the Russian Orthodox Church (newsland.com/community/8218/content/grazhdanskii-brak-eto-ne-semia/6059694), using sex to pay for rent and other
services and goods spreads across Russia (newsland.com/community/4636/content/seks-v-obmen-na-uslugi-ili-kak-rossiiane-ukhodiat-v-prostitutsiiu/6055066),
but the government doesn’t want any discussion of condoms even in programs
directed at preventing HIV/AIDS (meduza.io/news/2017/11/03/organizatorov-uroka-po-profilaktike-vich-poprosili-ne-govorit-o-prezervativah and kommersant.ru/doc/3458849).
8.
Demographic
Decline of Ethnic Russian Nation Accelerating. The size of the decline in the
size of the Russian population has accelerated 50 times between 2016 and this
year, experts say (newizv.ru/article/general/03-11-2017/ubyl-naseleniya-v-rossii-uskorilas-v-50-raz-6b7bef85-09f4-4864-919c-593f0fe41f72),
with ethnic Russians accounting for almost all of that fall (newsland.com/community/4109/content/kak-vymiraiut-russkie-v-rossii-gorkaia-statistika/6059890). The number
of Russians marrying before 25, the group that traditionally had provided the largest
number of new births, has fallen to only a third of what it was 50 years ago (zen.yandex.ru/media/id/59ecd86c5816691ca9d925d8/kak-za-56-let-izmenilsia-vozrast-jenihov-v-rossii-rsfsr-59f6476179885ebd1f4536a0).
Air quality in many regions and especially in the Urals has deteriorated (politsovet.ru/57069-na-urale-stalo-opasno-dyshat.html),
and Moscow is rapidly running out of potable water (iz.ru/664909/roman-kretcul/poputali-berega).
Russians are discovering that even if they check into hospitals, they may now
not be able to get the medicines they need as many medical facilities don’t
have them (kavkazr.com/a/zachem-lezhat-v-bolnitse-esli-tam-net-lekarstv/28829534.html). Optimization is increasingly recognized as a
disaster with officials combining facilities that should never be combined (thebarentsobserver.com/en/life-and-public/2017/10/murmansk-venereological-and-sports-clinic), and statistics show that more Russians per capita
kill themselves outside of Moscow than inside its borders (lenta.ru/news/2017/10/30/suicide/).
9.
Conflicts between
Northern Peoples and Russian Corporations Expand. Ever more
conflicts are breaking out between the indigenous peoples of the North and
Russian corporations, with the former protesting and the latter threatening to
leave the population in the lurch unless it agrees to everything the companies
want (nazaccent.ru/content/25821-shorcy-proveli-v-myskah-odinochnye-pikety.html
and ura.news/articles/1036272800).
The Russian authorities continue to oppress the Shapsugs and the Circassians
more generally (caucasustimes.com/ru/cherkesskij-vopros-v-21-veke/
and ekhokavkaza.com/a/28820069.html).
They also have expanded their efforts to shut down Russian nationalist websites
(spektr.press/news/2017/11/03/vo-vkontakte-zablokirovali-soobschestva-partii-nacionalistov/).
Meanwhile, Muslims are mulling the introduction of halal cryto-currency to do
an end run around the ruble (onkavkaz.com/novosti/3377-musulmane-rossii-zadumalis-o-sozdanii-haljalnoi-kriptovalyuty.html),
and a new study suggests that Jewish contacts with the Chuvash during the
Russian revolution were an important channel for the introduction of ideas
about autonomy into Russian thinking (idelreal.org/a/chuvashi-i-evrei-1917-revolution/28820648.html).
10.
Tatars Ready to
Use All Legal Means to Defend Their Language. Kazan officials and activists say
they will use all legal means to defend their language rights, but it is
increasingly obvious that legal defense will do little to stop the illegal and
unconstitutional actions of the Russian state (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59F6D41C1C4B1,
idelreal.org/a/pismo-minnikhanovu-podpisalo-bolee-13000-chelovek/28819722.html
and newsland.com/community/4109/content/tatarskii-iazyk-kak-sredstvo-politicheskogo-shantazha/6063728). But
individual Russians show they are ready to use the legal system even in support
of Moscow’s illegal aims by filing suit against the Tatar authorities (idelreal.org/a/28833167.html).
Elsewhere, the Chuvash Congress has denounced Putin’s language policies as
national nihilism (idelreal.org/a/chuvashskiy-national-congress/28823178.html
and mariuver.com/2017/11/01/sohran-iz-jaz/).
And Daghestanis have found that the government is simply not providing enough
textbooks in native languages to make instruction realistically possible (chernovik.net/content/respublika/russkiy-ili-rodnoy).
11.
Russian State Not
Russian Believers Decides Who’s Been Offended. Putin and his supporters have
argued that a Russian law blocking any statements or actions that offend
believers is a protection for believers, but a study has found that it is the
Russian state and not Russian believers that decides who has been offended and
who not (sova-center.ru//publications/2017/11/d38187/).
Russian Orthodox activists meanwhile are complaining about state oppression of
themselves (ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/11/02/svoboda_sovesti_pod_ugrozoj/),
even as Patriarch Kirill denounces as dangerous calls for freedom, equality and
brotherhood (newsland.com/community/politic/content/patriarkh-kirill-obiavil-opasnym-lozung-svoboda-ravenstvo-bratstvo/6060148),
and Moscow analysts insist that Russian Protestants aren’t like their Western
counterparts (interfax-.ru/?act=news&div=68526).
Muslims are seeking to prevent schools from becoming places of religious
competition (ng.ru/kartblansh/2017-10-31/3_7107_kartblansh.html),
but they have won one victory: Moscow hotels are now adapting to needs of
Muslim tourists (ansar.ru/rfsng/novye-moskovskie-gostinicy-adaptiruyut-dlya-turistov-musulman).
The Russian authorities are continuing their crackdown against the Jehovah’s
Witnesses and expanding it to include some Buddhist groups (kazanreporter.ru/news/23027_nizhnekamskiy_centr_-svideteley_iegovy-_trebuyut_priznat-_bankrotom and politsovet.ru/57085-buddistov-iz-monastyrya-v-kachkanare-obyavili-samozvancami.html).
Other religious groups Moscow considers sects are also suffering from official
abuse (snob.ru/selected/entry/130747
and sova-center.ru//news/community-media/media-conflicts/2017/11/d38191/). But Moscow very publicly celebrated the 200th
anniversary of the Bahai faith (ng.ru/ng_religii/2017-11-01/11_431_bahaism.html),
and Russian officials encouraged shamans to pray for the salvation of Lake Baikal
(ria.ru//20171029/1507773529.html).
12.
How Many Regions
will Go Bankrupt Before System Changes? Moscow’s imposition of unfunded
liabilities on the regions mean that ever more of them will go bankrupt,
prompting questions in many regions as to when and how all this will end (nakanune.ru/articles/113416/).
In other regional developments, RFE/RL has opened a new regional portal devoted
to Siberia and the Russian Far East (sibreal.org/).
Despite Moscow’s efforts, few are investing in the North Caucasus (kavkazr.com/a/kavkazskaya-zavisimost/28811098.html).
A new novel celebrating the Prussian past of Kaliningrad has been condemned as
anti-Russian (ruskline.ru/analitika/2017/11/03/golyj_korol_kaliningradskoj_kultury/),
even as more officials there are swept up in a purge (newsland.com/community/8171/content/v-kaliningrade-zaderzhan-deputat-oblastnoi-dumy-i-izdatel-oppozitsionnoi-gazety/6063003).
13.
Russian
Intelligentsia Appeals to Putin to End Oppression of Intelligentsia. In a move that
epitomizes the problems of protest in Russia, members of the Russian intelligentsia
have appealed to Putin to end the oppression of their numbers (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/10/28/267432/). The commemorations of Stalin’s victims
attracted sizeable crowds (sobkorr.ru/news/59F6B845B5700.html, newsland.com/community/4109/content/obolvanivanie-cherez-pokaianie/6058064 and echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/2082340-echo/). Migrants staged a hunger strike in Daghestan
(nazaccent.ru/content/25786-v-dagestane-migranty-ustroili-golodovku-i.html),
a man in Tatarstan killed himself to protest police brutality (.business-gazeta.ru/article/362630),
the long-haul truckers announced they will resume their strike on December 15 (kommersant.ru/doc/3455992).
Activists wanted to wear gas masks when Putin came to Chelyabinsk but officials
banned that (sobkorr.ru/news/59FC2B0E5C50D.html). And more people demonstrated in support
of the European University in St. Petersburg (freeingria.org/2017/10/v-peterburge-proshlo-shestvie-prizrakov-v-zashhitu-evropejskogo-universiteta-fotogalereya/).
14. Russians Blame Moscow for Repression Even When Local
Officials Carry It Out. The Kremlin has tried to deflect criticism for
repression by having regional officials rather than its own carry out most such
actions, but this isn’t working, according to Nezavisimaya gazeta; and today, most Russians blame not those
carrying out the orders but those who have given them (ng.ru/editorial/2017-11-03/2_7109_red.html).
Across Russia, rules against protests are being tightened (rosbalt.ru/piter/2017/10/27/1656616.html),
pupils and their parents are being threatened if either takes part in
demonstrations (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/11/02/74426-v-yaslyah-bunty-ne-nuzhny
and newsland.com/community/5652/content/uchitelia-pytaiutsia-zapugat-shkolnikov-spiskami-fsb-za-uchastie-v-protestnykh-gruppakh/6057916). In the best Stalinist tradition, a Chechen has
been forced to apologize publicly for criticizing the police force (thechechenpress.com/lenta-novostej/13951-zhitelnitsa-chechni-publichno-izvinilas-za-zhalobu-na-silovikov.html).
Activists say there is now no freedom of assembly in Russia (ng.ru/politics/2017-11-03/3_7109_spch.html).
The ban on anonymizers has gone into effect (echo.msk.ru/news/2084026-echo.html),
but Russian IP providers say they can’t afford to enforce Russian government
restrictions (graniru.org/Internet/m.265183.html).
Russia now ranks fifth in the world in terms of the number of unsolved murders
of journalists (echo.msk.ru/news/2084914-echo.html),
although Putin sees no link between attacks on them and freedom of the press (lenta.ru/news/2017/10/30/putinsvobods/).
In symbolic moves, the Russian Guard puts down a revolt in a mental hospital (regnum.ru/news/accidents/2341231.html),
and Russian police mark the day of victims of political repressions with more
arrests (ixtc.org/2017/10/politsiya-otmetila-den-pamyati-zhertv-politicheskih-repressiy-zaderzhaniyami/).
15.
Another
500,000 Russians Evacuated in Second Month of Bomb Scares. Half a million Russians in 52 cities were
evacuated during the second month of telephone bomb scares (ng.ru/news/598571.html).
Meanwhile, a real underground bomb factory was discovered (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/10/28/74364-v-zhilom-dome-balashihi-nashli-laboratoriyu-po-izgotovleniyu-vzryvchatki-i-razminirovali-balkon-chto-izvestno), veterans complained to Putin about their
mistreatment and the mistreatment of serving officers (ng.ru/politics/2017-11-03/1_7109_army.html).
Ever fewer Russians support Putin’s policies in the Donbass although most continue
to approve annexation of Crimea (rbc.ru/politics/30/10/2017/59f341949a79475a1a914f69?from=main
and gordonua.com/news/crimea/bolshe-poloviny-rossiyan-vidyat-bolshe-polzy-chem-vreda-v-anneksii-kryma-opros-214788.html).
Putin’s Russian Guard is expanding by a third and taking on new functions (newsland.com/user/4297659013/content/sozdanie-sil-bystrogo-reagirovaniia-v-rosgvardii/6055317 and nvo.ng.ru/realty/2017-11-03/12_972_rosgvardia.html).
And the Russian government has set up a special anti-drone force (ng.ru/news/598593.html).
16.
Moscow Certain It
has Nuclear Superiority Over US, Russian Senator Says. A Russian
senator on the Federation Council’s defense and security committee says that
Moscow is confident that it has nuclear superiority over the US (nvo.ng.ru/gpolit/2017-11-03/1_972_potencial.html).
Other Russian officials said that NATO tried but failed to disrupt the Zapad
2017 exercises (nvo.ng.ru/forces/2017-11-03/1_972_west2017.html).
But problems remain: the Russian draft system has been denounced as archaic and
ineffective (rosbalt.ru/posts/2017/11/02/1658109.html),
Russian arms sales are projected to fall next year (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59FB54A21D2EA),
and another helicopter crash raises qusitons about security (newsland.com/user/4297931203/content/krushenie-vertoliota-mi-8-na-shpitsbergene-prinialo-neozhidannyi-oborot/6057985). As far as soft power is concerned, the Russian education
ministry wants the Cyrillic alphabet to be used in all CIS member countries (ria.ru/religion/20170606/1495927891.html),
Moscow has threatened to close Russian airspace to Dutch airlines if that
country goes ahead with investigations on the Malaysian plane disaster (newsland.com/community/5652/content/moskva-grozit-zakryt-nebo-dlia-gollandskikh-perevozchikov/6064307),
and more coverage in Russia has surfaced about how Russian trolls organized
both sides of an anti-Muslim protest in Houston (sobkorr.ru/news/59FAC373B68AD.html).
17.
Monuments War
Spreads from Mathilda to Wall of Shame to Beyond. Now that Mathilda
is in theaters and most are finding it something less than promised or
threatened (newsland.com/community/8211/content/chaplin-na-video-proklial-rossiian-za-matildu/6057653, rufabula.com/articles/2017/11/03/nipple-of-imperialism
and novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/10/27/74350-ne-dlya-pamyati-a-dlya-covesti),
Moscow media have shifted to other issues, including calls for placing a Stalin
statue next to the memorial to his victims to promote balance (newsland.com/community/4765/content/riadom-so-stenoi-skorbi-dolzhen-stoiat-pamiatnik-stalinu/6063672).
Once again, Russia’s day of national unity was a bust with half of Russians
saying they don’t know what it is about and slightly more saying they have no
plans to mark it other than to take the day off (nakanune.ru/news/2017/11/3/22488167/
and nazaccent.ru/content/25834-opros-57-rossiyan-ne-budut-prazdnovat.html).
A planned restaging of the seizure of the Winter Palace was replaced by a light
show (politsovet.ru/57093-v-peterburge-otmenili-shturm-zimnego-dvorca.html),
and victims of the Soviet regime complained about the Kremlin’s efforts to
promote itself as their supporters (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=59F649807BA7B
and graniru.org/Politics/Russia/Politzeki/m.265179.html).
Meanwhile, a statue to Bolshevik revolutionaries was taken down in Irkutsk (forum-msk.org/material/news/13897379.html),
St. Petersburg was changing more street names and restoring pre-1917 ones (newsland.com/community/7451/content/chleny-toponimicheskoi-komissii-peterburga-prizvali-vernut-gorodu-riad-istoricheskikh-nazvanii-ulits/6057920), a monument to FSB officers who lost their lives
has gone up in Ingushetia (onkavkaz.com/novosti/3351-v-ingushetii-otkryli-pamjatnik-pogibshim-fsb-shnikam.html),
some have called for the KPRF to pay for maintenance of the mausoleum while
others have pointed out that the Yeltsin center costs more to operate than the
mausoleum does (rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=79358
and svpressa.ru/politic/article/185276/)
as part of the latest controversy over whether Lenin should finally be buried (rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=79353,
newsland.com/community/7268/content/i-vnov-o-mavzolee-i-desovetizatsii-vynos-tela-ili-vynos-mozga/6063424,
echo.msk.ru/blog/ganapolsky/2085174-echo/,
nterfax-religion.ru/?act=news&div=68525,
versia.ru/matvienko-schitaet-chto-o-zaxoronenii-lenina-poka-govorit-rano and snob.ru/selected/entry/130826). And a new campaign has been launched in opposition
to Russian government plans to erect a statue to Islam Karimov in Moscow in the
future (fergananews.com/news/27142).
18.
West Continues to
Use International Sports Federations to Persecute Russia, Moscow Says. Russian
officials say that the West and especially the US are using the IOC and WADA to
unfairly persecute Russian athletes with their constant talk about doping and other
problems (newsland.com/community/7268/content/mok-i-wada-prodolzhaiut-dobivat-rossiiskii-/6062284, ruskline.ru/news_rl/2017/10/31/saakashvili_pomozhet_ssha_sorvat_chm2018_po_futbolu_v_rossii/, lenta.ru/brief/2017/11/01/lyzhniki/,
and lenta.ru/news/2017/10/28/nidersochi/).
Russia is presumably even more unhappy with a FIFA action concerning the World
Cup: the international group has sold television rights to the competition in
Russia next year to China (newsland.com/community/4109/content/fifa-prodala-prava-na-transliatsiiu-chm-2018-ne-rossii-a-kitaiu/6061175). The Islamic State has released a poster calling
for the execution of athletes who take part in the 2018 World Cup competition (themoscowtimes.com/news/islamic-state-releases-poster-of-footballer-execution-ahead-of-2018-world-cup-in-russia-59414). Moscow says venues are ready but FIFA questions
that (politsovet.ru/57061-mutko-obyavil-o-zavershenii-podgotovki-ekaterinburga-k-chm-2018.html
and newizv.ru/news//28-10-2017/fifa-nashla-nedostatki-na-stadione-v-rostove-slishkom-mnogo-stupeney).
The Russian government announced that there is no chance Russian athletes will
compete in the South Korean Olympiad under neutral flags (newsland.com/community/7694/content/zasedanie-komissii-mok-v-lozanne-zakonchilos-bezrezultatno/6060528 and echo.msk.ru/news/2085616-echo.html).
Russian and Chinese hockey players engaged in a
violent fight during a game (lenta.ru/news/2017/10/28/drakuustr/).
But one thing will happen next year: the Russian authorities are committed to
marking the anniversary of the centenary of the murder of the Imperial Family
during the World Cup competition (politsovet.ru/57095-igrat-i-kayatsya.html).
19.
Moscow Fuses
February and October Revolutions for Its Own Purposes. The Kremlin has
purposely blurred the February and October revolutions of 1917 because it does
not want to highlight the fact that the Provisional Government brought
democracy while the Bolshevik one suppressed it, according to one Moscow
commentator (politikus.ru/articles/100885-soobrazhenie-o-fevrale-i-oktyabre-1917-goda-pochemu-vlast-hochet-ih-slit-voedino.html).
20. 71 Percent of Russians Say Stalin Didn’t Repress Any
of Their Family Members. According to
a new poll, nearly three out of four Russians say that Stalin didn’t repress
any member of their extended families, a far lower figure than used to be cited
in perestroika times (newsland.com/community/5652/content/v-semiakh-71-grazhdan-net-zhertv-stalinskikh-repressii-vtsiom/6063029).
21.
Russian
Airline Now Names Planes for Russian Saints. A
regional Russian carrier has given each of its planes the name of a Russian
saint, a reflection of the growing role of Orthodoxy in life there (rusk.ru/newsdata.php?idar=79356).
22.
Russians Mark 48th
Anniversary of First Soviet-Made Toilet Paper. The Soviet Union introduced
domestically produced toilet paper only in 1969, and several writers have
celebrated that event on this anniversary (oadam.livejournal.com/91535.html).
23.
Only a Bare
Majority of Russians Think Russians are United. A new poll finds
that only 54 percent of Russians say that the Russian people are united. The
remainder either say that its members aren’t or do not want to offer an opinion
(echo.msk.ru/news/2085618-echo.html).
24. Gender Gap in Russia Said Widening. The gap between
men and women is widening in Russia whether measured by power or money, a new
study says, with women increasingly left behind and politically alienated as a
result (themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-woman-sre-politically-alienated-gender-gap-report-shows-59451).
25.
More
than One Million People in Russia Kept in Slavery.
The Global Slavery index says that more than one million residents of Russia,
almost one percent of the population,
are now kept in conditions of slavery. This means that Russia now ranks seventh
among the countries of the world in terms of the number of slaves. Most in
Russia are sex slaves, the index says (snob.ru/selected/entry/130619
and globalslaveryindex.org/country/russia/).
26.
Today’s Russian
‘Thieves in Law’ Live in Cyprus and are Acknowledged via Skype. The so-called “thieves in law,” the elite of
the Russian criminal world, are today very different from their predecessors.
In the past, they were at the top of the heap of prisons and camps. Now, they
are more likely to be living abroad in Cyprus and to be recognized in that status
by their fellow thieves via Skype (ura.news/articles/1036272765).
And 13 more from countries in
Russia’s neighborhood:
1. Is US Delinking Donbass and Crimea? The US special
representative for Ukraine has proposed not mentioning Crimea in any decision
about the Donbass. Although he says that the US does not and will not accept
Russian occupation of the Ukrainian peninsula, some Ukrainians fear that
Washington is now delinking the two issues as the Kremlin clearly wants (newsland.com/community/8211/content/volker-predlozhil-ne-vspominat-o-kryme-pri-reshenii-problem-donbassa/6065157).
2. Nearly 50
Percent of Ukrainians Now Favor Visa Regime with Russia. In
the latest indication of Ukraine’s increasing separation from Moscow, almost
half of all Ukrainians now back the introduction of a visa requirement for
Russians who want to come to Ukraine (thinktanks.by/publication/2017/10/31/v-ukraine-pochti-do-50-vyroslo-chislo-storonnikov-vizovogo-rezhima-s-rossiey.html).
3.
Odessa
Ceasing to Be a Russian-Speaking City.
Odessa, long a stronghold of the Russian language, is rapidly ceasing to be a
Russian-speaking city, to the delight of Ukrainians and to the dismay of at
least some Russians (newsland.com/community/politic/content/odessa-perestanet-byt-russkoiazychnym-gorodom/6063698).
4.
Pro-Ukrainian
Chechen Woman Fighter Assassinated in Ukraine. Amina Okuyeva, a
Chechen who came to Ukraine to fight for its independence from Russia, was
murdered, a case that has reignited fears that Russian agents are now able to
carry out such attacks and get away with them as well (gordonua.com/blogs/jurbutusov/v-kremle-znali-chto-okueva-i-osmaev-byli-dvigatelem-chechenskogo-soprotivleniya-v-ukraine-imenno-poetomu-na-nih-velas-ohota-214999.html).
5.
Russian Occupiers
in Crimea Justify Repression by Inventing Terrorist Conspiracies. In order to
justify their increasing repression against the population of the occupied
Ukrainian peninsula, Russian officials there are creating legends about the
existence of terrorist groups (ru.krymr.com/a/28830856.html).
6.
Massive
Repressions Resume in Belarus, UN Report Says.
The Lukashenka regime has resumed its policy of mass repression,
according to a new United Nations report (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/10/28/267396/). One consequence
of that is that ever more people and especially younger wants want to move
abroad (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/11/1/267814/).
7.
Belarusian Army No
Longer Looks Soviet But Still Soviet in Spirit. The Belarusian
military has adopted new uniforms which make its soldiers and officers look
less like Soviet ones, but one of the plagues of the Soviet military –
dedovshchina – continues, claiming yet another soldier’s life this week (belsat.eu/ru/news/belorusskaya-armiya-otkazhetsya-ot-shapok-ushanok/ and charter97.org/ru/news/2017/11/2/267895/).
8.
Moldovan High
Court Opens Way for Reidentifying Moldovan as Romanian – and Possibly More. The Supreme
Court of Moldova has issued a ruling that could allow that country to
reidentify its national language as Romanian and possibly even to join Romania
and thus become a NATO country via the backdoor (vz.ru/world/2017/10/31/123773.html and ng.ru/cis/2017-11-03/1_7109_moldova.html).
9.
First Container
from Kazakhstan Reaches Turkey via Baku-Tbilisi-Kars Railway. In a clear
indication that the railroads from Central Asia via the Caucasus to Turkey are
now integrated, the first container from Kazakhstan has reached the Turkish
city of Kars (turantoday.com/2017/11/baku-tbilisi-kars-railway.html).
10.
First Kazakh
Newspaper in New Latin Script Appears. Now that Astana has approved the new
Kazakh Latin script, the first newspaper in that alphabet is being published (http://www.centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1509637140).
11.
Restrictions on
Media Intensifying in Central Asia, OSCE Says. The countries in Central Asia are
increasingly restricting media freedom, according to a new report by the OSCE.
The organization stresses that journalists are at risk not only of repression
but even of loss of life (exclusive.kz/zhurnalistika_v_czentralnoi_azii_strah_krov_i_smert).
12.
Riga Puts All who
Fought Against Latvia in World War II in Same Category. A legal move by
the Latvian parliament to count in the same way veterans who fought against
Latvia both in the German army and the Soviet one has sparked furor in Moscow
which views this move as yet another effort to equate Stalinism and Nazism (newsland.com/community/8218/content/seim-latvii-zakonodatelno-urovniaet-uchastnikov-voiny-so-storony-sssr-i-fashistskoi-germanii/6062853 and postsovet.ru/blog/pribaltika/961645.html).
13. Estonia May Introduce Ukrainian as Language of
Instruction in Some Narva Schools. The Estonian government is considering
introducing Ukrainian as a language of instruction in some of the schools in
the northeastern portion of the country given that many of the people there now
counted as ethnic Russians are in fact from Ukraine (rus.err.ee/637469/v-narve-pogovarivajut-o-vozmozhnosti-izuchenija-ukrainskogo-jazyka-v-shkolah).
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