Author Archives: Shamel Blue

WINDOW ON EURASIA: TRASH HEAPS INCREASINGLY UNDERMINE HEALTH OF NORTH CAUCASIANS

WINDOW ON EURASIA: TRASH HEAPS INCREASINGLY UNDERMINE HEALTH OF NORTH CAUCASIANS

Paul Goble
            Staunton, November 13 – Mounting piles of trash improperly disposed of and the poisoning of runoff water from them have already been identified as major problems at Olympic construction sites in and around Sochi, but the threat trash poses to the population is much broader and now affects the population of the entire North Caucasus.
                In an article in “Novyye izvestiya” today, Veronika Vorontsova says that “many reions of the North Caucasus Federal District now rank at the bottom as far as ecological well-being is concerned, with Ingushetia at 75th out of 83 regions and Daghestan at 65thoverall (newizv.ru/society/2013-11-13/192335-gory-musora.html).
              Given all the other problems of the North Caucasus, the state of the environment might seem a secondary matter, but environmental contamination often caused by industrial plants which simply dump their wastes into rivers or construction efforts which put highly toxic waste in poorly constructed trash heaps are causing cancer rates to jump among people there.
              Like officials involved in Olympic construction efforts in Sochi over the last several years, plant managers say they have been taking steps to reduce emissions and to dispose of waste properly, but Vorontsova says, “local experts and residents do not believe” what the official and businessmen are saying.
              And both point out that these two categories of people provide the clearest indication possible that they are not telling the truth. Unlike other residents who often have no choice but to live near the plants or waste sites, the families of the officials and businessmen never live close to where the pollution is coming from.
              If the environmental situation is especially bad in Daghestan and Ingushetia, it is also threatening in other North Caucasian republics as well. A plant built in Karachayevo-Cherkessia to support Sochi construction, to give but one example, is regularly putting poisons into the atmosphere and water supply, activists say, and people are getting sick.
              Residents have staged protests and written petitions to local, regional and federal officials, but to date, they have seldom received the kind of action they want.  Officials talk about taking care of the “unique nature” of the region, but they allow almost anything in the name of economic development.
              And what they allow in one area may make it far more difficult to correct problems in others: Widespread deforestation is not only contaminating the rivers on which the population relies, but it is reducing the capacity of the natural environment to clean itself either now or in the future. As a result, polluted rivers are staying polluted far longer than in the past.
             Gayirbeg Abdurakhmanov, the deputy chairman of the Green Party in Daghestan, blames this pollution for the rapid growth of the number of cancer victims “in all regions of the North Caucasus Federal District.”  In Daghestan alone, 6500 organizations and firms are putting waste directly into the water supply without any effort to filter it out.
           Elena Ilina, a member of the Ecological Water on the North Caucasus, says she is especially concerned about “the absence of organized trash pickup from small cities and settlements.”  That means that poisons leach into the water supply.
             Unfortunately, she says, the authorities “are not devoting sufficient attention to this problem.”  What they are focusing on instead is harassing environmental groups like Environmental Watch on the North Caucasus to prevent them from calling attention to this problem in advance of the Sochi Olympics.
              Unlike doing anything to protect the environment and the health of the people of the North Caucasus, arresting activists is something the Russian authorities always seem to manage to do quickly and efficiently.
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SOCHI 2014 WINTER OLYMPICS: THE CIRCASSIANS CRY GENOCIDE

SOCHI 2014 WINTER OLYMPICS: THE CIRCASSIANS CRY GENOCIDE

SOCHI, THE SITE FOR THE 2014 WINTER OLYMPICS, JUST HAPPENS TO BE WHERE THE RUSSIANS DISPOSSESSED AN ENTIRE NATION EXACTLY 150 YEARS EARLIER. THE SURVIVORS’ DESCENDANTS SAY IT WAS GENOCIDE—AND NOW THEY’RE DEMANDING JUSTICE.

Vladimir Putin may think he has trouble enough on Moscow’s streets without worrying about demonstrators outside the country. If so, perhaps he should think again. This week in Istanbul, New York, Brussels, and other world cities, protesters are taking aim at his most cherished project: the 2014 Winter Olympics. Although the facilities at the Caucasus Mountains resort of Sochi are already winning enthusiastic praise from visiting skiers, thousands of angry activists are determined to spoil Putin’s party.

 

The marchers are Circassians, the descendants of a people who once had their own country on the shores of the Black Sea, between Crimea and the modern-day Republic of Georgia. They lost it a century and a half ago to a brutal campaign by the imperial Russian army to seize the entire Caucasus region. The Circassians resisted for four decades until May 21, 1864, when they finally surrendered and were expelled from the land of their fathers. Until recently their descendants marked the date only with quiet remembrance ceremonies. But in 2007 the International Olympic Committee accepted Russia’s bid to hold the 2014 Games at Sochi—the very place where the Circassians surrendered in 1864. Since then, May 21 has become a day of rage.

“How would you feel—how would the Russians feel, if athletes came from all over the world to ski or ice-skate on the graves of their ancestors—and [the athletes] did not even know they were doing it?” demands Danyal Merza. Last May 21, the 29-year-old telephone technician, along with two other ethnic Circassians, his friends Clara and Allan Kadkoy, traveled from their homes in New Jersey all the way to Turkey, where most members of the Circassian diaspora now live. The four of us ended up near the head of a chanting crowd of thousands of Circassians. The human wave, topped by a foam of anti-Sochi banners, poured down Istanbul’s Istiklal Street before breaking against a triple line of police who stood with truncheons and tear gas outside the Russian consulate.

Speaking into a bullhorn, Merza squared his shoulders and shouted the group’s demands in English: no Sochi Olympics, recognition of the Circassian genocide, and the right to move back to the homeland the Russians seized a century and a half ago. His listeners roared their approval in Turkish, and their voices resounded from the steep houses on either side: “We don’t want Olympics in Sochi!” Allan pumped his fist and shouted along with them. “It’s the first time I’ve chanted without knowing what the words mean,” he told me afterward. His wife was similarly transported. “I could never imagine feeling like this,” she said. “We might not speak Turkish, but we’re all saying the same thing in different languages.”

For Putin, being chosen to host the 2014 Games was a personal triumph. Sochi, where the forested Caucasus Mountains drop into the Black Sea and you can swim in the morning and ski in the afternoon, was to be the perfect venue to show the world that Russia had recovered from its post-Soviet problems. If there was any threat to the Sochi Games, security experts said, it would come from the opposite end of the mountains, in Chechnya. So when Circassian protesters turned up at the Vancouver Games in 2010, waving green-and-gold flags and demanding the Games be moved away from Sochi, most commentators were baffled. Circassians? Who were they?

A century and a half ago, people didn’t have to ask. The Circassians were the world’s favorite freedom fighters, the darlings of Western diplomats who viewed Russia’s expansion as a threat to global stability. They battled for their homeland against almost impossible odds, holding out five years longer than even the Chechens had. And their defeat was catastrophic. Driven from their homes, they fled across the Black Sea to Turkey in dangerously overcrowded boats. No one was keeping count of the victims, but a contemporary historian estimated that 400,000 died, and almost half a million were deported. Only a relative handful were allowed to stay in Russia. And although their exodus was front-page news in the West, they soon slipped out of history, remembered only—if at all—as a source of concubines for the Sultan’s harem. As far as I know, I am the only non-Circassian to have written a book about their tragedy, and that came out only in 2010.

Documents from the time tell how the Russians loaded hundreds of thousands of Circassians onto sailing vessels and turned the evictees’ abandoned homes over to the empire’s shock forces, the Cossacks. One military report speaks of the crops that were left in the fields for the Cossacks to harvest and eat. My own research in the British archives has turned up letters describing the terrible conditions of the Circassian refugees. “Everywhere you meet with the sick, the dying, and the dead; on the thresholds of gates in front of shops, in the middle of streets, in the squares, in the gardens, at the foot of trees,” wrote an Ottoman Empire health inspector from the town of Samsun, a place where 200 Circassians a day were dying in 1864, according to letters from the Russian consul at the time.

With the end of the Cold War and the rise of the Internet, Circassians began to piece together their history. In 2005 a Circassian activist and shopkeeper named Murat Berzegov asked the Russian Parliament to recognize the destruction of his nation as genocide. The request seemed reasonable enough: the legislators had previously acknowledged that Stalin’s deportations of a whole list of nations—the Chechens, the Crimean Tatars, the Volga Germans, and many others—had been genocides, and the Circassians’ tragedy was every bit as bad. But the Russian Parliament took those votes when its deputies included Soviet-era dissidents. By 2005 those justice seekers were long gone, however, replaced by party hacks in expensive suits, and Berzegov’s petition brought him nothing but threats and harassment.

But his example inspired other Circassians to stand up. After the International Olympic Committee chose Sochi in 2007, Circassians around the world appealed the decision, but the IOC refused to reconsider. Asked for an explanation, the IOC’s media director replied to Newsweek in an email: “Our philosophy is that hosting the Olympic Games can help bring positive developments in host countries and also be a catalyst for constructive dialogue. The IOC’s role is to ensure the Olympic Games are of excellent quality, while remaining relevant and ensuring they deliver a long-term legacy to host cities. We believe that through sport we can achieve a lot but cannot resolve all the issues that a country might face.”

Nevertheless, the Sochi Games give the Circassians a unique chance to mobilize their scattered nation. “We, whose fathers were subjected to genocide, once again underline that we condemn in the strongest terms the IOC’s decision,” said a statement from the Circassian group No Sochi 2014, which includes activists from Israel, Turkey, Jordan, Germany, France, and Belgium, as well as the United States. “Don’t give the torch that the freedom lover Prometheus fired in the Mountains of Caucasus to the murderer of liberties, Russia.”

As the movement gathered momentum, the Russian government launched a counterstrike. Leading the charge was one of the Kremlin’s most trusted spin doctors, Margarita Simonyan, editor of the state-owned English-language Russia Today channel. An episode of her television show What’s Happening, broadcast in April last year, mocked the outcry. Simonyan listed Sochi’s real problems as traffic, traffic, and sewage. Then she displayed a graphic supposedly proving that since wars have been fought all over the world, the Games should not be held anywhere, after which she opened a satellite feed to an American foreign-affairs analyst, only to grill him about the weather in Washington.

She followed this performance with a furious blog post. The opponents of the Sochi Games were guilty of “clear, intentional, premeditated anti-Russian activity,” she wrote. “We are talking about international hypocrisy, about loathsome attempts to rock first one, then another of our Russian ethnic boats, under the cover of concern for small nations. I do not like it when former CIA agents … argue with sad expressions about the fate of a nation whose name they only heard the day before yesterday.”

Simonyan’s attacks only strengthened the Games’ opponents. A video of her show was emailed throughout the Circassian community, snowballing anger and disbelief as it went. Amid the furor, Russia’s Duma—the lower house of Parliament—finally agreed to meet with a handpicked group of moderate Circassian activists, and, shortly before last year’s May 21 protests, a small group of deputies formally received a list of Circassian demands. Once again the campaigners called on the Russian government to acknowledge that what happened in 1864 was a genocide. But more than that, they called for the repeal of all laws preventing ethnic Circassians from moving back to their ancestral homeland, and they demanded that Russian authorities cease interfering in Circassian organizations. Everyone involved must have understood that the session was an empty formality.

Speaking to me after the meeting, Sergei Markov, a Duma deputy and historian, readily conceded that “mass killings” of Circassian civilians had taken place. He told me he had studied many books about their history. Even so, he insisted, anyone who believes there was a Circassian genocide is either illiterate or has sold out to an anti-Russian conspiracy. “The question is being awakened by those who want to make Russia weak,” he told me. “They want Russia to always have to fight in the Caucasus, to explode the Circassian bomb.” Markov has a history of spotting anti-Russian plots. At the time of the 2008 war between Georgia and Russia, he argued that it had been ordered by Dick Cheney to help John McCain’s presidential campaign.

In fact, the Circassians are finding allies among those with grievances against Moscow. A year ago the Georgian Parliament voted unanimously to recognize the conquest of Circassia as a genocide, the first country in the world to do so. This May 21 the Georgians are taking their campaign a step further, unveiling a Circassian genocide memorial in the town of Anaklia, some 200 kilometers down the coast from Sochi and, not coincidentally, practically next door to the Kremlin-backed breakaway Republic of Abkhazia. Meanwhile the Circassians’ own protests grow bigger every year. “A lot of our friends say that it’s almost 150 years and that we should move on,” Allan told me. “But they don’t understand. For us it’s like yesterday.”

“I second that,” said Danyal.

“I third it,” said Clara.

Even if they can’t stop the Sochi Games, they intend to use the occasion to tell the world their people’s story. And for the first time in a century and a half, that will put the Circassians back on the front pages.

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Is Putin Planning to Use the Olympics Again as a Cover for Aggression?

Is Putin Planning to Use the Olympics Again as a Cover for Aggression?

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Window on Eurasia: Sochi Countdown – 13 Weeks to the Olympiad in the North Caucasus

WINDOW ON EURASIA: SOCHI COUNTDOWN – 13 WEEKS TO THE OLYMPIAD IN THE NORTH CAUCASUS

Note:  This is my 37th special Window on Eurasia about the meaning and impact of the planned Olympiad on the nations in the surrounding region.  These WOEs, which will appear each Friday over the coming year, will not aim at being comprehensive but rather will consist of a series bullet points about such developments.  I would like to invite anyone with special knowledge or information about this subject to send me references to the materials involved. My email address is paul.goble@gmail.com  Allow me to express my thanks to all those who already have. Paul Goble
Sochi Olympic Park ‘Still Under Construction,’ Visitors Say.  Although Russian officials insist that everything is almost ready for the games, Western journlists who have visited Sochi says that the Olympic park is “still under construction” and that “workers are scrambling to finish the athletes’ housing facilities.”  They also say that “the 40,000-seat stadium designed for the opening and closing ceremonies isn’t finished either” and that organizers are practicing at an alternative venue, an indication that they have fears about whethere the original site will be finished in time (cbc.ca/news/world/sochi-olympic-construction-in-hurry-up-mode-1.2289160?cmp=rss).
Construction Materials Now Being Delivered to Sochi by Air.  In yet another indication of Moscow’s push to finish Olympic construction on time, the Russian authorities are now using specially outfitted Boeing 747-8F cargo planes to deliver 30 tons of construction materials on each flight.  The costs of air delivery of such materials, of course, are enormous and suggest that construction in Sochi is not quite as far along as Russian officials routinely claim (blogsochi.ru/content/samyi-dlinnyi-grazhdanskii-samolet-v-mire-dostavil-v-aeroport-sochi-olimpiiskii-gruz and kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233048/).
Kozak Warns Olympic Builders to Finish on Time or Face Criminal Charges.  Vice Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak, who is overseeing the Sochi Games for the Kremlin, says that contractors must live up to their promises and deliver finished buildings on time or they will face criminal sanctions (sochi-24.ru/sochi-2014/olimpijskih-podryadchikov-predupredili-ob-ugolovnoj-otvetstvennosti.2013117.70311.html).
Olympic Contractors Break a Sochi Water Main on Average Every Three Days. During the first ten months of 2013, Olympic facility contractors have managed to break water mains in Sochi 115 times, or once every three days.  Often that leads to water cutoffs to businesses and residences for days or in some cases weeks.  In many cases, it appears that the breakage has happened because contractors either do not know where existing pipes are or are working too fast to be bothered to check (sochi-24.ru/ekonomika/v-sochi-stroiteli-rvut-vodoprovod-kazhdye-3-dnya.2013111.70057.html).
Olympic Torch has Gone Out 44 Times So Far.  Russian organizers have had little luck with their much ballyhooed Olympic torch. It has gone out 44 times so far, prompting investigations into the manufacturer, suggestions that the whole thing is a flop or the result of “dark forces,” and the decision by some along its track to meet the torch not with celebration but by clicking cigarette lighters as the runner passes (business-standard.com/article/news-ani/sochi-olympic-torch-goes-out-44-times-during-longest-relay-in-history-113110700348_1.htmltrust.org/item/20131105122233-hkwuy/?source=search,themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/why-russias-olympic-flame-is-a-flub/489013.html  and spb.mk.ru/article/2013/10/30/938407-v-peterburge-olimpiyskie-fakelyi-tushila-nechistaya-sila.html).
Another Storm Warning Issued in Sochi.  The Sochi area faces its third major storm in the last several months, and officials are asking residents to be “vigilant and to take all necessary security measures.”  The two earlier storms did significant damage to coastal construction and flooded portions of the Olympic facilities.  The clean up from those storms is still going on (sochiadm.ru/press-sluzhba/22646/).
IOC Head Doesn’t Want Any Kind of Boycott of Sochi.  Saying that sports should unite rather than divide, IOC head Thomas Bach said that he very much hoped that there would not be any kind of boycott – by athletes, countries or officias — directed against the Sochi Games (rsport.ru/olympic_games/20131106/699446698.html).
European Parliamentarians Said Ready to Call on National Officials to Boycott Games.  European parliamentarians are ready to call on the leadership of the European Union and its constituent countries not to attend the Sochi Olympics, a stance many Russian opposition figures support (ng.ru/politics/2013-10-02/100_olimpiada.html
European Olympic Head Calls on Georgia Not to Boycott Sochi.  Patrick Hickey, president of the European Olympic Committee, urged Georgia to refrain from boycotting the games, despite the fact that 30,000 Georgians have petitioned Tbilisi to do so because of what they suggest is the continuing Russian occupation of Georgian territory (vestnikkavkaza.net/news/sport/47110.html).
Russian Diplomat Says Sochi Will Welcome Georgian Athletes and Fans.  Vitaly Churkin, the Russian Federation’s permanent representative to the United Nations, says that Russia will welcome Georgian athletes and fans to Sochi “despite the attempts of Georgia” to stir up opposition to Moscow over the Olympiad (mk.ru/politics/caucasus/news/2013/11/06/941765-rossiya-poobeschala-s-uvazheniem-prinyat-gruzinskih-sportsmenov-v-sochi.html).
Brezhnev Briefly Considered Cancelling 1980 Moscow Games.  In1975, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev sent a message to the CPSU Central Committee suggesting that it might be a good idea for the USSR to cancel the games, a message he compossed five years before anyone began talking about a boycott.  Brezhnev said that “besides the enormous cost, there may be all sorts of scandals that could tarnish the Soviet Union.” Russian President Vladimir Putin does not seem worried about either the cost or the scandals this time around, apparently certain that Western countries will not object and may even help him celebrate the Games (online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303448104579151810357664316).
Sochi Police Harass Two Norwegian Journalists … Two Norwegian journalists, Reporter Øystein Bogen and cameraman Aage Aunes, who work for Norway’s TV2 television station,the country’s official broadcaster of this year’s Olympics, were harassed by police near Sochi, told they were on a “blacklist” issued by the KGB, and asked during their brief detention “Are you going to say anything negative about the Olympics?” (www.buzzfeed.com/rachelzarrell/olympics-reporter-repeatedly-arrested-by-russian-police and  sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/policejskie-zaderzhali-norvezhskih-zhurnalistov-pugali-tyurmoj.2013116.70252.html).
… Russian Foreign Ministry Apologizes … Following official complaints by the Norwegian government and a media firestorm about this in Moscow and Europe, the Russian foreign ministry officially apologized to the two journalists and said that local law enforcement personnel had “exceeded their authority” (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233027/).
… But Rights Groups Say More Needs to Be Done to Ensure Media Freedom. But Memorial and Human Rights Watch said that Moscow needed to do more to ensure that journalists would be able to do their jobs free of official pressure. An official of Memorial said that “of course, censorship exists” whatever it is called but that unfortunately, the Russian government is “unconcerned about being condemned for this by the international community. Jane Buchanan of Human Rights Watch said that the IOC should investigate and that Moscow officials should stop all harassment of journalists (ru.euronews.com/2013/11/05/the-dark-side-of-sochi/, kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232931/,  hrw.org/news/2013/11/05/russia-tv-crew-reporting-sochi-olympics-harassed  and sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/policejskie-zaderzhali-norvezhskih-zhurnalistov-pugali-tyurmoj.2013116.70252.html).
Chernyshenko Says Russian Olympic Uniforms Rainbow-Colored But Warns Against Demonstrations at Sochi.  Dmitry Chernyshenko, head of Russia’s organizing committee, says that “our official uniforms for Games organizer is full of rainbow color” and that his group “keeps social inclusivity a key for our Games.  At the same time, however, he warned against “any propaganda or any demonstrations” during the Games “in accordance with the Olympic Charter’s Rule No. 50” (olympictalk.nbcsports.com/2013/11/07/dmitry-chernyshenko-sochi-olympics-today-show/).
Sochi Gays Say City is ‘Dangerous’ for LGBTs. Vladislav Slavsky, a gay resident of Sochi, says “It is dangerous here. I’m not living my life now, I’m surviving. I always have pepper spray on me when I’m walking. I get attacked from the bushes. It’s stopped somewhat recently, but I have been attacked many times from people hiding in the bushes near my house. In the evening when it gets dark they jump out of the bushes, insult me, throw stones and glass bottles at me.” Andrey Tanichev, who owns a gay club there, adds that “Before this law was passed, gay people didn’t have any rights anyway. Gay prides or even talking about them was unthinkable. Even more so, talking about gays in general was unthinkable. Unthinkable – they simply didn’t exist. Like there was no sex in the Soviet Union, there were no gays either. And this law at least raised certain questions among the public. I think that this will not change anything until the regime changes. And I think the regime’s attitude towards minorities will not change in any case” (jn1.tv/video/news?media_id=181078).
UN Calls for Social Inclusion at Sochi.  In its resolution calling for an Olympic truce, the UN General Assembly urged Moscow and future host governments to “promote social inclusion without discrimination of any kind,” Andre Banks, executive director of the gay rights group All Out, used the occasion to call for the repeal of Russia’s anti-gay propaganda law. ‘If the IOC and Russian officials were serious about making the Games open to all, they would take action before Sochi to reject laws that are leading to a dramatic spiral of brutal violence against gays and lesbians,’ he said (trust.org/item/20131106200428-9br5i/?source=search).
Moscow Blocks Tribute to Gay Victims of Nazi Germany.  The Russian government refused to allow a Russian gay rights group to hold an event in Moscow to remember gays who were killed by the Nazis. Nikolai Alekseev, founder of Moscow Pride, said that ‘the Moscow authorities are becoming increasingly absurd, and the ban of the rally to denounce the crimes of Hitler and Nazism is more proof of this. [Indeed,] The government is approving of Nazi Germany’s genocidal policies.” Moreover, he said, “the Moscow authorities have actually formalized a total ban on all public gatherings of the LGBT community. They are actively using the federal law banning so-called gay propaganda to justify their homophobic actions” (gaystarnews.com/article/russia-bans-tribute-gay-victims-nazi-germany011113).
Russian Gays Seek Data on Repression Against Them.  The Russian LGBT network is circulating a questionnaire to find out what kinds of repressions Russian gays now face. Meanwhile, “Otechesvennyye zapiski” has published a large article on the history and current state of Russian homophobia (lgbtnet.ru/ru/content/issledovanie-vliyaniya-gomofobii-na-lgbt-soobshchestvo-v-rossii and magazines.russ.ru/oz/2013/1/10i.html).
If Moscow Discriminated against Blacks Rather than Gays, No One Would Go to Sochi, Canadian Commentator Says. Jennifer Good says that if the Russian government had announced the same policies about blacks that it has for LGBTs, no government in the world would consider sending its athletes to Sochi. Racism is fortunately unacceptable, but “sexuality is easier to hide and homophobia continues to make it acceptable to ask people to do so”(brockpress.com/2013/11/sochi-olympics-racism-and-homophobia/).
Medvedev Promises ‘Absolutely Safe’ Games.  Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev says that “a number of threats exist in our country, so everyone is working as hard as possible – the special forces are working, and the government as a whole is trying to guarantee the absolute safety of the Olympic Games …I believe that’s what will happen. But it’s clear that we should take a number of other decisions to make sure that these Games are held without a hitch, so that they will be remembered as a spectacular sporting event” (trust.org/item/20131101074858-qoop0/?source=search).
Chernyshenko Promises ‘Safest Games Ever’ in ‘Friendly Atmosphere.’  Saying that Russian officials will not spy on fans or athletes or embed tracking devices in credentials, Dmitry Chernyshenko, head of the Sochi organizing committee, says that “rumors that Big Brother will be watching you are fiction not reality.”  He said that people will be secure and in “a friendly atmosphere.”  Unfortunately, he continued, “double standards exist” and “what is forgiven in one country will be criticized in our case” (usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/2013/11/05/sochi-olympics-security-plan/3449757/).
To Attend Sochi Olympic Events, Fans Will Need Special ‘Tickets Bearing Their Names.’  In order to enhance security, Aleksandr Zhukov, the vice speaker of the Russian State Duma, says that fans will need tickets bearing their names that guards will be able to check against their documents. “Each viewer must register in advance,” he said, “and after this will receive a special card.” It is unclear from Zhukov’s comments whether this is simply the fan passport that officials have talked about in the past or a new system in which the individual tickets themselves will have the name of the fan on them (vesti-sochi.tv/olimpiada/20901-bilety-na-olimpiadu-v-sochi-budut-imennymi).
Sochi Security Arrangements Draconian, Independent Experts Say.  Andrey Soldatov and Irina Borogan, two of Russia’s most distinguished independent experts on that country’s security services, say that security in Sochi will be unprecedentedly tight, with 5500 cameras, more than 40,000 security personnel, and various electronic monitoring devices. Moreover, the security services appear committed to further expanding their reach and testing methods that may be used elsewhere (kavpolit.com/zhestche-silnee-sekretnee/).
Moscow to Allow Citizens of 20 Countries Visa-Free Three-Day Visits to Sochi. Citizens of 20 countries, including the United States and China will be able to visit Sochi and several other Russian cities for three days without securing a Russian visa, a rare example of a loosening of control and one that could be exploited against the Games (ria.ru/world/20131103/974462989.html).
Russian Experts Counter Moscow’s Anti-Circassian Claims.  As Circassians in the North Caucasus have stepped up their demands that Moscow allow Circassians living in wartorn Syria to return to their ancestral homelands, Russian officials have suggested that there are many reasons that they shouldn’t be. Now, a group of Russian experts has provided arguments as to why the five “myths” the Russian government has offered are without foundation and reflect only Moscow’s unwillingness to allow more Circassians into the region in advance of the Sochi Games (wordyou.ru/v-rossii/pyat-mifov-o-cherkesskix-repatriantax-iz-sirii.html).
Sochi Investors Demand More Money from the Government.  Apparently using a strategy they have employed before, investors and businesses involved in Sochi construction have told the Russian government that it must provide them with more loans and other assistance if the work is to be completed in a timely fashion.  Some commentators have suggested this “ultimatum” could be rejected and the work would be finished anyway, but others say that the businesses have the government in a tight squeeze and consequently are likely to be bailed out again especially since many politicians and bureaucrats are profiting as well (vedomosti.ru/sochi-2014/news/18259081/ultimatum-iz-sochipolitcom.ru/print.php?id=16692south-worker.com/oligarxam-ocherednye-preferencii-a-rossijskim-trudyashhimsya-dulya/ and svpressa.ru/economy/article/76877/).
Krasnodar Airport to Serve as Backup to Sochi.  According to a document obtained by journalists that officials said was restricted to official use, the Russian authorities plan to restrict air traffic into and out of Krasnodar airport as the Olympics approach in order to have a backup for the Sochi field.  At present, Krasnodar field is working normally (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233053/).
Environmentalist Arrested, Then Released with Warning.  Andrey Rudomakha, coordinator of the Ecological Watch on the North Caucasus, was arrested and then released with a warning. He and his organization have angered officials because of their reports about discrepancies between official claims and reality and about special arrangements that have been made for Vladimir Putin’s dacha (sochi-24.ru/obshestvo/-koordinatora-ekovahty-otpustili-iz-policii.2013111.70083.html).
Local Ecologists Dispute Moscow’s Claim that Sochi Will Be Carbon Neutral.  Local environmentalists say that the trash dumps that contractors are leaving behind strongly suggest that Sochi will not be carbon neutral as Russian officials continue to claim (aroundtherings.com/articles/view.aspx?id=44896  and  blogsochi.ru/content/printsip-%C2%ABnol-otkhodov%C2%BB-zakopali-v-zemlyu).
German Petition Seeks to Protect Sochi’s Homeless Animals from Euthanization. More than 34,000 people have signed an online petition in Germany calling on Russian officials not to go forward with their plans to euthanize homeless animals in Sochi in advance of the Olympiad (secure.avaaz.org/de/petition/Boykott_gegen_Olympische_Winterspiele_2014_in_Sotchi/?fbdm)
Russian Commentators Say Sochi Games are for Export.  Vladimir Putin may not get the bounce at home that he is hoping for, Moscow commentators say, because Russians have concluded that the Olympiad is being run not for them but for a foreign audience. Indeed, Oleg Kozyrev writes, the authorities have transformed life in Sochi into “a hell” for residents and have generally ignored the interests and needs of ordinary Russians as opposed to those of the oligarchs. Moreover, he says, “the authorities have no plan to make the Olympiad a holiday for the entire country.” Few Russians can afford the ticket and htel prices. And officials are interested only in enriching themselves and promoting their image of Russia to foreigners who may not appreciate what is actually taking place in the country. Meanwhile, Olympic officials have announced a new 1.5 million US dollar program to promote the Games (svpressa.ru/blogs/article/76987/https://www.newizv.ru/society/2013-11-05/191853-ne-pobeda-i-ne-uchastie.html and sochi2014.rsport.ru/sochi2014/20131105/669131047.html,
Moscow’s Use of Force in North Caucasus Won’t End Islamic Threat There. Corneliues Graubner, a New York specialist on the Caucasus, says that “the aggressive security sweeps targeting Islamists” across the North Caucasus “may well disrupt possible plans” by militant groups to disrupt the Sochi Games, but these acitons will do little to end the Islamist challenge. “Putin and his pawns in Dagestan will not be able to shoot themselves out of the Islamist threat. As long as autocratic tendencies and corruption shape the Kremlin’s policies in the North Caucasus, money and time will be wasted, and lives will continue to be lost” (eurasiareview.com/04112013-north-caucasus-homemade-threat-hovers-sochi-oped/).
Victims of Russia’s Anti-Gay Propaganda Law Can Apply for Asylum, Dutch Say. Fans Timmermans, the foreign minister of the Netherlands, said that Russia’s anti-gay law “has a stigmatizing and discriminatory effect and contributes to a climate of homophobia” in the Russian Federation and thus could become grounds for asylum in his country (reuters.com/article/2013/11/05/us-netherlands-russia-gays-idUSBRE9A40LT20131105).
Duma Deputy Wants to Ban Football Matches in North Caucasus Lest They Spark Ethnic Violence. Oleg Nilov, the deputy head of the Just Russia fraction in the Russian State Duma, has called for the introduction of a ban on football matches in the North Caucasus because such competitions often feature nationalist signs and slogans and end in violence, including the burning of national flags.  He suggestd that the authorities might introduce rugby as an alternative competition. LDPR head Vladimir Zhirinovsky archly suggested that having curling competitions might be even more effective (peoples-rights.info/deputat-predlozhil-zapretit-na-severnom-kavkaze-futbol/).
Russian Officials Say Sochi Identity Emerged Only After 1864.  An article by a Russian specialist on the Caucasus ignores the fact that Sochi was a Circassian city before the 1864 genocide tsarist officials conducted against that nation, thereby whiting out most of the history fo the city, and suggests that the Sochi local identity now so much in evidence is the product of the influx of ethnic Russians, Cossacks and other nationalities (kavkazoved.info/news/2013/11/04/nekotorye-aspekty-sochinskoj-identichnosti.html).
Russians Still Upset about Sochi and Summer Time.  Ordinary Russians and many Duma members remain upset that Moscow signed contracts with foreign firms to cover the Sochi Olympiad that in effect require the entire Russian Federation to remain on summer time until the games conclude. Various commentators and deputies are considering proposals that would allow at least part of the country to change sooner, although government opposition makes it unlikely any of these ideas will be realized (versia.ru/articles/2013/nov/04/poteryannoe_vremya).
US Human Rights Campagn Launches ‘Love Conquers Hate’ Effort Against Russian Anti-Gay Law.  The Human Rights Campaign, the largest US gay right group has launched a campaign featuring actors, actresses, past Olympians and other sports stars wearing Russian-language “Love Conquers Hate” T-shirts. Among those taking part are Jonah Hill, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kristen BellmFergie, Kelly Osbourne, Ricky Martin, Kevin Bacon, Doutzen Kroes, Anthony Bourdain, Tim Gunn, Perez Hilton, Todd Glass, Jonathan Del Arco, Amanda Leigh Dunn, Ana Matronic, Olympic swimmer Craig Gibbons, NBA basketball player Jason Collins, country singer Maggie Rose and soccer players Jozy Altidore, Lori Lindsey and Megan Rapinoe. The group is calling for the repeal of Russia’s anti-LGBT propaganda before the Sochi Games begin (huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/04/t-shirt-protest-russia-anti-gay_n_4212846.html).
Amnesty Says Olympic Torch Throws ‘Light on Human Rights Violations in Russia.’Amnesty International says that Moscow’s decision to have the Olympic torch pass through all the federal subjects of the Russian Federation has had the effect of highlighting human rights violations of all kinds in that country.  Had there been no torch parade, many aspects of this dark side of Russian life today would have remained hidden at least to the international community. Sergey Nikitin, the Russian Federation representative at Amnesty, says that “the Russian authorities must not use the Olympics” as a screen to hide such abuses and that any efforts by them to do so are totally unacceptable and a violation of the Olympic Charter (amnesty.org.ru/node/2599).
Putin Spends Billions on Sochi But has No Money for Children With Cancer, Shenderovich Says.  Viktor Shenderovich, a Russian writer and commentator, says that it is totally unacceptable that President Vladimir Putin is prepared to spend “billions” for the Olympiad but can’t come up with government funds to help children with cancer.  As a result, he said, he probably won’t watch these games(svoboda.org/content/article/25155491.html).
10,000 Copies of ‘Misha and His Moms Go to the Olympics’ to Be Sent to Russia.  A US firm based in Michigan plans to mail copies to children in Moscow and Sochi of a coloring book about the adventures of a Muscovite boy named Misha and his two lesbian mothers at the Olympics. In the book, Misha makes friends from around the world,,, even as Russian police beat a gay couple for holding hands and two straight female medal winners kissing on the awards platform. It also shows a terrified Misha being dragged out of hs home by police, a dramatic illustration of efforts by Duma deputies to legalize the seizure of children from gay parents (.dvocate.com/parenting/2013/11/01/activists-using-coloring-book-take-aim-russia).
Moscow’s Claims to the Contrary, Sochi is Anything But Invalid Friendly.  The Russian government has not lived up to its promises to ensure that people with physical disabilities will be able to move about the site of the Olympics and Paralympics, local residents say.  There are many places which still require going up and down long flights of stairs, a clear violation of Moscow’s commitments to the IOC but not something the IOC has complained about (blogsochi.ru/content/barernaya-sreda-v-olimpiiskom-sochi).
FIFA to Take Steps Against Discrimination in Russia before 2018 Competition. While this move will do little to help improve the situation at Sochi next February, the International Football Federation has announced that it is planning to take steps to ensure that competitors at the 2018 cup championships in Russia do not suffer from racism or discrimination of any kind (vesti.ru/doc.html?id=1149455&1149455).
Cossacks to Replace Police in Stavropol During Sochi Games.  The authorities in Stavropol kray, an increasingly restive region in southern Russia, have announced that they are hiring Cossacks to take the place of regular police there during the Sochi Games.  Apparently, the Stavropol police force will be sent to Sochi.  This is the clearest indication yet that Moscow is having to scramble to backfill the places of those it is dispatching for security in Sochi (stavropolye.tv/ce/view/62486).
Moscow Sets Fines for Motorists in Sochi During Games.  The Russian government has set special fines for motorists driving in Sochi during the Olympics, fines whose size has already drawn fire from local residents who fear they will be victimized as a result (spbvoditel.ru/2013/10/31/060/).
Sochi Residents Say Moscow has Entered Them in New Olympic Event – Survival. Faced with continuing and in some cases worsening water, sewage, power and heating shutoffs, torn up streets, cracked sidewalks, official malfeasance and other overbearing actions, rising prices, increasing restrictions on their movements, residents of Sochi say that they have been entered against their will in a new Olympic sport – survival.  Many add that the only benefit they have from the games is that they don’t have to pay the sky-high hotel prices, but some of them are losing their homes and many are outraged by the way in which construction has transformed and not in a good way their home town (blogsochi.ru/content/sochi-2014-vo-skolko-oboidetsya-poezdka-na-olimpiadusochi-24.ru/obshestvo/v-centre-sochi-na-noch-otklyuchat-vodu.2013117.70295.htmlkavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233016/,blogsochi.ru/content/sochi-%E2%80%93-%C2%ABkaraul-grabyut%C2%BB,blogsochi.ru/content/na-krayu-olimpiadysochi-24.ru/obshestvo/nuzhno-poterpet.2013116.70210.htmlblogsochi.ru/content/anons-treningi-po-vyzhivaniyu,
Circassians to Have Only Marginal Place at Sochi Games. Ruslan Gvashev, chairman of the Shapsug elders organization, says that Moscow’s promises notwithstanding, the Circassian nation of which his Shapsugs are a subgroup will have only a marginal place in the celebration of the Olympiad.  He adds that Moscow has mislead the International Olympic Committee, the international community, and many Circassians about this and points to the unwillingness of officials in Sochi and nearby regions to register Circassians as an indigenous people or otherwise include them in public discussions.  Gvashev says that he is especially outraged that the Sochi administration has not been willing to talk about the preservation of a Circassian cemetery there or take steps to counter the rising tide of xenophobia among ethnic Russians in the North Caucasus (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232780/).
Russia Lacks Historical Data on Sochi Weather.  All of Moscow’s predictions about the weather in Sochi next February suffer not only from the difficulties of making longterm forecasts but also because Russia has had a weather station in Sochi  for only the last ten years and thus lacks longterm data and because the station itself is some 1600 feet below where the competitions will take place (nesn.com/2013/11/2014-winter-olympic-games-in-sochi-will-use-snow-stored-from-winter-of-2012/).
Blogger Transforms Sochi Countdown Clock into Barometer of Spending on Olympiad.  By replacing days with billions, hours with millions, minutes with thousands, and second with dollars, a Russian blogger has posted online a picture of the Sochi countdown block that transforms it into a clear display of just how much money Moscow has spent on what is far and away the most expensive Olympiad in history (www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/winter-olympics-2014-russian-president-vladimir-putin-takes-on-the-black-widows-in-sochi-security-crackdown-8916428.html).
IOC Calls on Russia to Investigate Trash Dumps in Sochi.  Given Russia’s zero waste pledge to the international community, members of the International Olympic Committee are expressing deep concern about reports that Olympic contractors continue to dump waste in various parts of Sochi and that this waste represents a threat to public health.  ”If this is true, I am astonished,” Gerhard Heiberg, a senior Norwegian IOC member and marketing commission chairman, told the AP on Thursday. ”This would be a breach of confidence between the Russian authorities and the IOC.”  Canadian IOC member Dick Pound called for urgent action to determine the safety of the water supply. ”If you’re the IOC, you say, `Look, we’ve got this report. We’re not in a position to assess it, but if it’s true, this really does compromise your own citizenry and it compromises the games. Could you please give us a quick and reliable report on what the hell is going on?” (sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2013/olympics/wires/10/31/2090.ap.oly.ioc.sochi.waste/).
Putin May Use Sochi to Dump Medvedev, KPRF Says. Sochi members of the KPRF in the Olympic city say that Russian President Vladimir Putin may use problems with the Olympiad as an occasion to fire Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and his government. They offer no specific evidence for their prediction (sochinskie-novosti.com/%D0%B8%D0%B3%D1%80%D1%8B-%D0%BF%D1%83%D1%82%D0%B8%D0%BD%D0%B0-%D0%BA%D0%B0%D0%BA-%D0%BF%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%BE%D0%B4-%D0%B4%D0%BB%D1%8F-%D0%BE%D1%82%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%B2%D0%BA%D0%B8-%D0%BC%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%B2%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%B0/).
Sochi Contractors Still Not Paying Many Gastarbeiters.  Despite promises and government intervention, a number of Olympic contractors still have not paid back wages to many immigrant workers (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/233026/).
Illegal Migrants Still in Sochi. Despite government pledges to round up and expel all illegal immigrants in Sochi by November 12, officials concede that they have not been able to do so, in part because despite the huge dragnet they have not found all of them and in part because businesses need their labor to this day (ng.ru/regions/2013-10-31/1_sochi.html andsvoboda.org/content/article/25154256.html).
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CIRCASSIANS ORGANIZE AS SOCHI OLYMPICS APPROACH

CIRCASSIANS ORGANIZE AS SOCHI OLYMPICS APPROACH

By: Valery Dzutsev

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Istanbul demonstration in support of assisting Syrian Circassians (Source: Caucasian Knot)

On October 31, the parliament of Kabardino-Balkaria approved an appeal to Russian Federation Council chairwoman Valentina Matvienko and State Duma Speaker Sergei Naryshkin to assist in the repatriation of Syrian Circassians to the North Caucasus. “Over 150,000 Circassians live on the Syrian territory,” the appeal read. “They have experienced hardships, such as fleeing their homes. Their natural aspiration to return to their historical homeland is inextricably linked to their concerns for their personal safety and well-being, for maintaining their cultural identity [in Syria].” Thus far, an estimated 1,000 Syrian Circassians have left Syria for the North Caucasus (https://ria.ru/arab_riot/20131031/973944694.html#ixzz2jQRGN5xD).

The Kabardino-Balkarian parliament’s appeal to the Russian parliament is not a trivial step, and required significant nerve on the part of the republican government given Moscow’s annoyance with the Circassian question. Even though Moscow preferred to keep quiet about the Circassian issue or make occasional neutral statements in the run-up to the Winter Olympics in Sochi in 2014, Russian analysts, many of them close to the government, repeatedly attacked the Circassians in a variety of ways. The Russian government is certainly not going to be happy about the Kabardino-Balkarian legislature’s attempt to ask the central government to respond to the plight of the Syrian Circassians. Despite serious pressure from Moscow, republican governments in the Circassian republics are seeking ways to support their ethnic kin. For example, the government in Adygea has set up a special website that helps to establish links between the Syrian Circassian refugees in the republic and their local clan members. An estimated 130 families of Syrian Circassians fled to Adygea after the unraveling of the Syrian crisis (https://ria.ru/society/20131031/973893088.html).

Moscow has signaled that it does not approve of Circassians’ return to the North Caucasus. Apart from stopping the flow of Circassian refugees from Syria, the Russian government also took a more hostile stance toward those refugees that made it into the country. For example, the Circassian civil organization Peryt was fined for helping a group of 19 Syrian Circassians obtain Russian business visas. These people arrived in Russia and then turned to the Russian government for protection as refugees from Syria. The authorities hit Peryt with a whopping $250,000 fine, which would virtually result in its closure. The refugees themselves were fined about $70 each for “lying” on their visa applications. A court in Nalchik decided the case in favor of Peryt, but it is still unclear how the government will respond (https://www.kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232464/).

The Sochi Olympics, which will be held on the historical lands of the Circassians, are a landmark event that provides a rallying point for Circassian activists to use to advance their interests. Ruslan Gvashev, the Circassian elder in Krasnodar region, said in an interview with a human rights organization based in Nalchik that Circassians should have the status of people indigenous to the region and be properly represented in the Sochi Olympics program. “They tell us, ‘you will also be represented at the Olympics, dance there, etc.,’ but we are not ‘also’—we are the only people native to this land,” Gvashev said. The activist stated that Circassians expected the Russian government to pay as much attention to the native people of the region as governments paid to the representation of indigenous people in previous Olympics games, such as Winter Games in Vancouver, Canada (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ4puMrbJSA&feature=share&list=UUGahtd72bcCG-dM3XtDKpvg).

In October, an association of the foreign alumni of the Kabardino-Balkaria State University was established in Nalchik. Last month also saw the launch of an Internet website that tells the story of the Circassians’ deportation to the Ottoman Empire by the Russian government in the 19th century, using historical documents. “The transnational Circassian movement is on the rise” because the democratization of Turkey has allowed that country’s Circassian 5 million-strong diaspora to organize and become an important voice for the Circassians, Circassian activist Andzor Kabard told the Kavkazsky Uzel (Caucasian Knot) website. According to Kabard, Georgia’s recognition of the Circassian “genocide” allowed the Circassian issue to be raised in the international arena, such as United Nations General Assembly, while the war in Syria has made the issue of the Circassians’ repatriation to the North Caucasus ever more pressing and the Sochi Olympics galvanized Circassians worldwide and helped them make their problems known globally. Kabard listed the main problems of the Circassians in the North Caucasus as the lack of the right to unify Circassians in their historical homeland, the degradation of the Circassian language, the de-secularization of Kabardino-Balkaria, the quasi-feudal system of governance in the North Caucasus imposed by Moscow, offensive interpretations of history by Russian historians, and the incitement of inter-ethnic and inter-religious conflicts by state propaganda (https://www.kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/232398/).

Circassian activists appear to have found an ally—albeit a cautious one—among the republican governments of the Circassian republics in the North Caucasus. At a time when Russian nationalism is so prolific in Russia, other nationalisms are bound to follow the lead, inspired by events in Moscow with the harassment of Central Asian and Caucasian Muslims. Even the ostensibly pro-Moscow elites in the North Caucasian republics are showing support for their ethnic kin, implicitly clashing with Moscow’s interests.

https://www.jamestown.org/programs/nc/single/?tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=41588&tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=24&cHash=0f46a9e35c40ef6344b70a5a5eaf86b2

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