Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 25 – The
co-presidents of the Social Constitution Council have called on Vladimir Putin
to postpone the referendum on constitutional amendments to prevent the further
spread of the pandemic and to allow time for alternatives to be developed so
that Russians will have a choice.
The letter from Yevgeny Gontmakher,
Leonid Nikitinsky, Vladimir Ryzhkov and Grigory Yavlinsky was sent two days ago
but has been posted online only today because of the Victory Day parade (yavlinsky.ru/article/obshhestvennyj-konstitutsionnyj-sovet-predlozhil-putinu-perenesti-golosovanie-po-popravkam-i-sdelat-ego-alternativnym/).
There is no indication that Putin
plans to agree or that the pandemic will stop anytime soon. In the last 24
hours, Russia officially registered 7113 new cases, bringing the cumulative
total to 613,994, and 92 new deaths, raising that total to 8605. Both are far
lower than in recent weeks (t.me/COVID2019_official/879).
The Russian media are devoting ever
more attention to the possibility that a vaccine will be ready for widespread
use by the fall (tass.ru/obschestvo/8815535)
as well as to reports that placing coronavirus victims in a magnetic field
helps to improve their chances for recovery (ria.ru/20200625/1573443109.html).
News about infection declines and
spikes and about openings and closings remained mixed. Arkhangelsk hospitals
said the number of cases had risen so far that they no longer had enough doctors
to treat them (tass.ru/v-strane/8815973).
And 30 percent of Russia’s holiday resorts said they would remain closed this
year (ura.news/news/1052437889).
But Moscow officials said that
theaters will reopen on July 15 if local and regional governments say
conditions are right (kommersant.ru/doc/4391372). Foreign specialists with work contracts will
now be allowed to enter Russia again (ura.news/news/1052437923),
and Russian Aviation is calling for the restoration of international flights,
beginning with CIS countries (ura.news/news/1052437843).
The economic news, however, was uniformly
bad. The economic development ministry said that Russians stand to lose 1.3
trillion rubles (20 billion US dollars) in income this year, and almost a
trillion more in 2021. Those declines will also hit the pension and medical
insurance funds (rbc.ru/economics/25/06/2020/5ef1c34b9a79471d3a3b1697).
What aid the Russian government has
promised isn’t getting through in many cases, and Vladimir Putin has ordered an
expansion of state supervision and control of its distribution, something many
assume will be kept in place even after the pandemic passes (rbc.ru/rbcfreenews/5ef48df29a7947ba5429933b).
The same thing is likely to happen
in border regions, with many people living on the Russian side being unable to
visit their relatives and friends on the other for months or even years ahead.
According to regionalist expert Vadim Shtepa, this is all about control and not
about protecting peoples’ health (severreal.org/a/30679952.html).
Meanwhile, FinExpertiza
reports that marriages are down across Russia by 40.2 percent since the beginning
of the pandemic. Declines are especially great in the North Caucasus Federal
District where national traditions involve large gatherings for weddings,
something not now allowed. The greatest decline has been in Kabardino-Balkaria
were marriages are off by 95.8 percent from a year earlier (akcent.site/mneniya/8495).
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