People power. For years Russian big wheels have been whizzing down roads
ignoring the rules confident that, should there be an accident, their
connections will help the police to come to the correct conclusion. As it were.
In Irkutsk in December, the daughter of the regional election committee
chairwoman ploughed
into two pedestrians. No
charges were laid. A couple of weeks ago, the car of a LUKoil executive
killed two people in a head-on collision; the victims were blamed. This was the
last straw and a strong public
opinion movement sprang up. Two observations (in addition to the obvious one)
here. First, these protests are made possible by “new media” – YouTube, social
networking, cellphone cameras. Second, an organisation of car owners called
Freedom of Choice has mobilised in other cases and stands ready to go into
action quickly. This is what is called civil society. For those who are
immediately going to interpret this as signs of disquiet with Medvedev, the
protesters are entirely in step with his pronouncements. But it is also a
challenge for him to put his efforts where his mouth is; as a public appeal to
him said: “If you take the case under your personal
control and punish the person responsible for the crash, you will prove your
commitment to the fight against corruption.” Yesterday Medvedev ordered an
investigation. The Irkutsk campaign did force the police to re-consider.
NATO. Continues its journey
towards reality. Several former German officials have said
that the time has come for NATO to invite Russia to join. The NATO SACEUR is
reported to have said Russia
should become a “partner” in missile defence. Better late than never, I
suppose, but it is rather late: as the Germans said: “One of the key bones of contention is that, for
historical reasons, the new members of NATO define their security as being
directed against Russia, while the imperative for Western Europe is that
security in and for Europe can only be achieved with and not against Russia.” Meanwhile, Russia’s
Ambassador to NATO, has offered a million
dollars to “the person who will prove that NATO is not pursuing military
planning against Russia”. Russian diplomats must be well paid! Of course, this
is a stunt: militaries plan for all kinds of contingencies.
Police. The policeman who
made the YouTube recording and was then arrested by his former colleagues, reports that he has
been released from custody.
Corruption. Investigators claim to have
broken up a racket, involving a former Moscow Oblast finance minister, which
made off with property and budget funds in 2007-2008.
Olympic angst. Putin has called for a probe
into use of funding for athletes (US$110 million says he). Meanwhile more nonsense
on how the performance shows that “Russia is at a standstill”. Mind you, Russians can be just as silly
about it. To paraphrase Freud: sometimes sport is just sport.
Buryatskiy. In an important success for the authorities, Said Buryatskiy (aka
Aleksandr Tikhomirov) was killed in
Ingushetia last week. The FSB has linked him to the
St Petersburg train
bombing. This will be a heavy blow to the jihadists in the North Caucasus
as Buryatskiiy may be said to have re-animated the jihad there both as a
theoretician and recruiter of suicide bombers.
Bushehr. Foreign Minister
Lavrov said that
the Bushehr NPP would be launched this year. Ah! the years do roll by: here from a year
ago.
Russia-Georgia. Nino Burjanadze, one of
the three “Rose Revolution” leaders and now opposition leader, has completed
her visit to Moscow. Her take
on the talks: “I participated in this meeting not to talk about the past, but to try
to find solution for the future.” And another of Saakashvili’s former allies is there
as well. Meanwhile, Saakashvili continues to hire US PR companies.
Russia-Ukraine. Yanukovych had a fruitful trip to Moscow with much talk of improving
relations. But, as expected, he laid down some markers, particularly that
Moscow must find a new base when the Sevastopol lease runs out in 2017. I
couldn’t agree more: Russian fleets should be based in Russia.
Ukraine. Mykola Azarov is the new PM.
He declared
that “The country has been plundered, the coffers are empty, state debt has
risen threefold ...”. Parliament also dismissed the
head of Ukraine’s National Security Service. Perhaps we will finally learn
about the famous “poisoning” of Yushchenko.
That time of year again. Latvian Waffen-SS veterans want to hold a
parade; the city says
no; the ruling party says it will
appeal. Last year they marched
anyway, despite a city ban.

It is definately time for NATO to invite Russia to the community of nations. This would benefit both sides of the divide as Nato needs to be all inclusive. Long overdue. ms
Posted by: Mike Stacy | March 15, 2010 at 04:45 PM