Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 31 – This past week,
as it seems every week, has featured numerous stories from Russia that are
definitely in the too strange not to be true category. Below are 13 of the most
interesting and at least in some ways potentially instructive about Russia
today:
1.
Siberian Teacher’s
Dismissal for Swimsuit Photograph Sparks Others to Pose in Protest. A teacher in Siberia
who had a photograph of herself in a remarkably modest swimsuit, prompting
teachers and celebrities across Russia to post photographs of themselves in swim
suits and more risqué underwear in protest (maximonline.ru/guide/maximir/_article/fleshmob-kuvshinnikova/ and ura.news/articles/1036277824).
2. Global Warming May Cost Russia Territory but Add to It
as Well.
As the Russian Arctic warms, some islands are disappearing but others are
appearing. As of now, Russia has gained more land there than it has lost (siberiantimes.com/other/others/news/changing-face-of-the-arctic-one-significant-island-vanishes-from-the-map-but-a-dozen-appear/).
3.
Nastya
Rybka Names Her Price. The young “sex trainer” whose dalliance with
an oligarch and activities in Thailand attracted so much attention a few months
ago has now announced her price: anyone who wants to spend a night with her
must come up with 2,000 euros (2600 US dollars) (rusmonitor.com/za-2000-evro-nastya-rybka-stanet-vashejj-na-vsyu-noch-istochnik.html). Meanwhile, Snob has published a comparison of
the prices of prostitution in various regions of the Russian Federation (snob.ru/entry/174160).
4.
Saami Accuse
Russian Officials of Racial Discrimination. Members of the Saami nation who
live astride the Norwegian-Russian border have accused Murmansk officials of racial
discrimination against them (novayagazeta.ru/news/2019/03/29/150425-korennoy-narod-saami-obvinil-pravitelstvo-murmanskoy-oblasti-v-rasovoy-diskriminatsii).
5.
Krasnodar
Youths Caught Pissing on Eternal Flame. Two young men in Krasnodar
Kray were caught on camera extinguishing the city’s war memorial in a most
unattractive way (by24.org/2019/03/30/piss_on_eternal_flame/). Other,
better behaved young Russians, however, are going to find getting into
university easier: 20 Russian higher educational institutions have announced
they’ll give extra points in the admission process to those in Russian Youth
Army (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5C9E29CF51954).
6.
KPRF, Orthodox
Church in Kaliningrad Say Gnome Statues Promote Paganism. The communists and the Russian Orthodox Church
in the Russian exclave have united to oppose displays of gnomes because, they
both suggest, such statues promote paganism (facebook.com/SANDYMUSTACHE/posts/1465154306952097).
7.
Tula Deputy Fined
for Meeting with Voters without Permission.
A deputy in the Tula assembly has been fined for meeting with his own electorate
without getting permission from the authorities, a violation of Russia’s law
governing public meetings (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5C9A110A4110D).
Meanwhile, other deputies at the regional level are showing that they are
prepared to go even further in taking repressive measures than Moscow yet is:
St. Petersburg deputies are calling for reviving the Soviet-era practice of
forced psychiatric treatment for those who don’t fit into Russian life (facebook.com/serkova.natalya/posts/1214971411985038).
8.
Moscow
Patriarchate Priests Signal What’s Important: Money and Nuclear Weapons. Patriarch Kirill’s
personal spiritual advisor took the unusual step of blessing only those with
money at a recent religious service (credo.press/223609/),
and a new church-sponsored memorial to the developers of Russia’s first atomic
bomb is shown as a priest (credo.press/223605/).
9.
Officials to
Pursue Heirs for Money Owed for Trash Removal. If someone dies without having
paid for trash collection, officials will now pursue his or her heirs, a step
that will only further infuriate Russians already outraged at Moscow’s trash
policies (mbk-news.appspot.com/region/mertvye-tozhe-dolzhny-platit/).
10.
If Rosstat Doesn’t
Report It, It isn’t Happening? The Russian state statistical committee
has announced that it will stop publishing monthly figures on the state of
Russian incomes, likely because recent months have shown such a precipitous
drop in them (finanz.ru/novosti/lichnyye-finansy/rosstat-prekrashchaet-publikaciyu-ezhemesyachnykh-dannykh-po-dokhodam-rossiyan-1028042521).
11.
Putin Pardons Far
Fewer Criminals than Yeltsin Did.
New figures show that Vladimir Putin has pardoned far fewer criminals
than his predecessor Boris Yeltsin did, a trend fully consistent with his more
repressive approach but one certain to anger many in Russia who have long seen
pardons, often tied to public holidays, as something normal (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/178502).
12.
When There was a
Mosque in the Kremlin. The scandalous
proposal by the Turkish president to transform the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul has
prompted Russian historians to recall that there was once a mosque inside the
precincts of Moscow’s Kremlin (moslenta.ru/istoriya/ryadom-s-krestami-na-khramakh-vidny-ochertaniya-polumesyacev.htm).
In another religion-related development, Moscow officials have agreed that land
held sacred by the Buryats will not be subjected to the free hectare program
that republic has been part of since its transfer to the Far East Federal
District (nazaccent.ru/content/29469-sakralnye-mesta-buryatii-isklyuchat-iz-zemel.html).
13.
‘Make Russia Great
Again’ Should Be Moscow’s Slogan. A Russian commentator says that Vladimir
Putin should take a page out of Donald Trump’s playbook and make the Russian
Federation’s slogan be “Make Russia Great Again!” (iarex.ru/articles/65273.html).
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