Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 31 – A survey of 13 residents of the northern capital by Emiliya
Kudysheva of the city’s Gorod-812 news portal finds that many of them have very
specific wishes for Vladimir Putin in 2019 with a large fraction of them expressing
the hope that he will change direction (gorod-812.ru/chto-byi-vyi-pozhelali-putinu-v-novom-godu/).
These include the following:
·
Aleksey
Tsivilyev, a United Russia Deputy in the City’s legislative assembly says he
wishes that Putin will find “real and true friends” in other countries who will
stand by him “in difficult times” rather than desert Russia s some like Belarus
regularly do.
·
Dmitry
Grigoryev, a Pomor old believer, says he hopes that Putin will behave as Boris
Yeltsin did in 1999 and announce that he is “tired” and thus is leaving office.
·
Artem
Smirnov, a financial consultant, says he wishes Putin will be able to achieve
real and not false stability and thus be in a better position “to feel more
easily the needs of the people and thus more successfully run the country.”
·
Maria
Matveyeva, an employee of the Pekariya café, says she wishes that he will spend
some time in the shoes of ordinary people rather than live in isolation from
them.
·
Yelena
Kalnitskaya, head of a demining company, expresses the hope that “our president
will have the strength and power of the Peterhof Samson” statue.
·
Cherstin Kronvall, a
correspondent of Finland’s YLE television channel, says she hopes he will give
foreign journalists the interview they have long asked for but been denied. If
so, she says, she would ask “has there ever been in the history of humanity a
moment when state borders were considered correct and located in fixed place?”
·
Anastasya Melnikova, a United
Russia deputy of the city’s legislative assembly, says she wishes the president
will have “strength and devoted people around him.”
·
Oleg Bodrov, a leader of the Finnish
Gulf Ecological Council, says he hopes that Putin will take up the issue of the
aging nuclear power plants in Russia and seek to ensure that there won’t be any
leaks or disasters.
·
Yevgeny Mikhailov, a trolleybus
driver, says he hopes that Putin “will not forget that Russia is not just
Moscow in which the government has promised to build 35 metro stations in the
next three years while in St. Petersburg where he was born over 25 years have
been built only 12 stations. He also
hopes that there will be an end to the endless repairs of Russia’s roads.
·
Leonid Zakharov, head of the
Khimizdat publishing house, says that Putin has achieved a lot but is clearly
running down as far as energy is concerned and that, as a result, Zakharov
hopes that he will find “a worthy successor” sometime in the next year and then
retire.
·
Nikolay Prokhorov, a tramway
driver, says he wishes Putin to have “interesting travels” but not so much
abroad as in various parts of Russia. That way, he continues, the president “will
see with his own eyes how the people live now and draw conclusions.”
·
Yelena Sudakova, a bookkeeper at
an Orthodox church, says she hopes that Putin will turn to God for help in his
efforts “in the struggle with all sorts of internal and external enemies … The
Lord will hear him and help.”
·
And
Vladimir Zhukovsky, director of the St. Petersburg’s Club of Geniuses, says
that he hopes Putin will follow Talleyrand’s injunction not to let zeal outpace
judgment.
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