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Saturday, August 25, 2012
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Russia's rights ombudsman decries punk rocker verdict - Washington Post
via Putin - Google News on 8/23/12
TIME |
Russia's rights ombudsman decries punk rocker verdict
Washington Post A Moscow court convicted the Pussy Riot band members last Friday of hooliganism motivated by religious hatred after they belted out a profanity-laced song against President Vladimir Putin on the altar of Moscow's main cathedral in February. Loading. Pussy Riot Trial Unleashes Putin's Secret Weapon: The Orthodox FaithfulTIME Putin-appointed rights watchdog slams Pussy Riot convictionsNational Post Girls AloudHuffington Post (blog) Reuters -The Guardian -New York Times (blog) all 579 news articles » |
Эксперты предрекают скорую отставку Дмитрия Медведева — свой пост глава правительства России может потерять уже осенью
Премьер должен уйти
Дмитрий Медведев © РИА Новости, Дмитрий Астахов
Справка KM.RU
Для большинства жителей России президент и премьер все еще остаются участниками тандема. Об этом свидетельствует синхронное падение их рейтингов. По данным Левада-центра с мая по август рейтинг Путина снизился на 6%, а Медведева – на 7%. При этом из 1600 опрошенных недовольство деятельностью правительства выразили 52%.
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Политологи считают, что начало противостоянию участников тандема положила пресловутая рокировка. Медведев до последнего лелеял надежду на то, что ему будет предложено баллотироваться на новый президентский срок; когда же стало очевидно, что это невозможно, счел себя несправедливо обиженным и поставил ультиматум, согласившись уступить президентский пост только в обмен на премьерский. Разумеется, для Путина это стало весьма неприятной неожиданностью, и его вовсе не радует то, что экс-президент продолжает строить планы по возвращению в Кремль.
О том, что противостояние уже переросло в острую борьбу, свидетельствуют события последнего времени. Как отмечают эксперты, если раньше пресекалась любая критика Медведева, то теперь для нее нет никаких препятствий. По словам политологов, Путин оставил премьера без защиты, что лишний раз подтверждает раскол в тандеме.
И как тут не вспомнить нашумевший фильм «Потерянный день» о войне в Южной Осетии? То, как отставные генералы Российской армии заклеймили Медведева за его «преступную нерешительность» и при этом превознесли Путина, «распинавшего» президента из Пекина, позволяет даже невооруженным взглядом увидеть до предела обострившиеся противоречия участников тандема. Не нужно быть искушенным в политике человеком, чтобы догадаться, что фильм – лишь удобный повод лишний раз показать, кто фактически управлял страной, и лишний раз намекнуть, что президент Медведев был лишь марионеткой в руках премьера Путина.
Или вот еще пример: во время Олимпиады-2012 в Лондоне Владимир Путин подписал указ, меняющий состав и структуру президентского Совета по развитию физкультуры и спорта. Если ранее, в бытность президентом Медведева, Путин делил с ним руководство, являясь первым заместителем и председателем президиума Совета, то, став президентом, он просто исключил из Совета премьера Медведева и большую часть членов правительства, оставив вице-премьера Дмитрия Козака и министра спорта Виталия Мутко.
Конечно, Медведев пытается по мере своих сил отвечать на выпады бывшего соратника, однако силы эти явно не равны. Взять хотя бы ситуацию с возвращением в кресло председателя совета директоров Роснефтегаза Игоря Сечина – правой руки Путина. В апреле прошлого года он был смещен со своего поста именно по инициативе Медведева. Кроме того, вместе с ним из госкомпании были выведены все чиновники. Тогда это было расценено как победа команды Медведева и ослабление Путина. Но перевес сохранялся недолго.
За день до инаугурации, 6 мая, Путин подписал распоряжение, согласно которому Сечин включался в список кандидатов в совет директоров Роснефтегаза, а затем – и директиву, прямо приказывающую членам совета директоров голосовать за избрание его председателем Сечина. При этом, как отмечает «Свободная пресса», Медведева он не поставил в известность.
В результате правительство фактически потеряло контроль над нефтегазовым сектором: в руках Сечина сосредоточились все денежные потоки отрасли. Помимо этого, он получил весьма широкие полномочия, став секретарем новой президентской комиссии по стратегическому развитию ТЭК. Впрочем, уступка правительству Медведева все же была сделана, полномочия Сечина частично ограничены, но при этом контроль над нефтегазовым сектором он не утратил.
Политологи видят в этом точно рассчитанный удар по имиджу нынешнего премьера. Он призван продемонстрировать обществу ничтожность Медведева как политической фигуры и его роли в принятии решений, что вполне может означать близкую отставку премьера.
Вероятно, Медведев и сам понимает это. А как иначе объяснить его нежелание оставить заместителя на время своего отпуска? Как отмечают эксперты, данное решение продиктовано желанием самоутвердиться, показать свою незаменимость. Не исключено, что Медведев опасается поставить эту самую незаменимость под сомнение, передав, пусть даже на непродолжительное время, свои полномочия кому-то другому.
Однако изменить ситуацию он уже не в силах. Будучи в свое время всего лишь «техническим» президентом, Медведев не способен стать самостоятельным премьером. Некоторые эксперты полагают, что его вообще назначили только для того, чтобы дать время Путину определиться со своей стратегией. И, видимо, это произойдет как раз осенью.
LGBT issues have taken a battering in Russia over the last year
Published on openDemocracy (http://www.opendemocracy.net)
Home > Pride, prejudice — just ‘don’t say gay’ in Russia
Pride, prejudice — just ‘don’t say gay’ in Russia
Pride, prejudice — just ‘don’t say gay’ in Russia
Igor Kochetkov [1] , 22 August 2012
Subjects:
- Civil society [2]
- Russia [3]
- Kemerovo [4]
- St. Petersburg [5]
- Politics [6]
- Human rights [7]
- Russian rights at the crossroads [8]
LGBT issues have taken a battering in Russia over the last year, with a number of regions introducing repressive laws against the so-called ‘promotion’ of homosexuality. The changes are part of a wider agenda to split Russian society, whipping up feeling against people ‘not like us’, says Igor Kochetkov.
Russia’s human rights campaigners have over the past six months become increasingly alarmed by the restrictions increasingly imposed on minorities and others advocating views not shared by the authorities.
The first victims of the new‘witch hunt’ were the LGBT communities in several regions of the Russian Federation (Ryazan, Kostroma, Arkhangelsk, Magadan, Novosibirsk, the Samara oblast, Krasnoyarsk Krai and city of St Petersburg [11]). Each of these regions introduced laws establishing administrative responsibility for the so-called ‘promotion of homosexuality among minors.’ A similar draft law is currently under consideration at the federal level. Moreover, the enforcement of these laws has already demonstrated that the concepts enshrined in them lack legal clarity, so they can be used arbitrarily to prevent the free expression of opinions and the holding of peaceful demonstrations by people defending equal rights irrespective of sexual orientation or gender identity. The police arrest people who call publicly for homophobic crimes to be investigated, who walk the streets with the rainbow flag and, even, who intend to hold a demonstration in defence of LGBT rights.
In view of the developing social and political crisis, the Russian government wants to make a political factor of homophobia so as to curry favour with that section of the public, which is least well educated and informed, and running scared. The wilful whipping up of these feelings could turn a general atmosphere (‘everyday homophobia’) into an important channel for social discontent, aimed at certain groups of people, in this case homosexuals, bisexuals and transgenders. It is essentially a form of political populism and it is dangerous because irresponsible politicians could split society, rather than uniting it, and provoke the growth of enmity and social tension.
The laws banning the 'promotion of homosexuality' are formally aimed at the protection of minors. That is the letter of these laws, but their spirit bans people from saying what they think, forbidding them the freedom of choice, and, thus, we see today that the verbiage about the law being for the protection of children is simply the letter of the law which is of no interest to even its creators or its users.
From the formal legal point of view, there are the regulations enshrined in international law and also the Constitution of the Russian Federation, which states that people's rights and freedoms may be restricted only when it is essential for the protection of life and limb, the health and morals of others. In our case the adjustments proposed by the members of the Legislative Assembly clearly restrict the right to disseminate information. The question then arises, how the dissemination of information about homosexuality, lesbianism, bisexualism or transgender as objectively existing phenomena could be harmful. The idea that someone would go into a school to hand out information about sex between men or between women is unimaginable.
Minors also have need of this information. Sexual orientation is formed and recognised long before the age of 18. Our society considers man heterosexual from birth, so when a teenager at 12/13 suddenly begins to realise he is attracted by people of the same sex, he gets scared and feels guilty. These teenagers really need objective, popular information about homosexuality and transgender from specialists, rather than from parliamentary deputies who are unreservedly ignorant. Heterosexual teenagers need this too.
One of the problems homosexual teenagers encounter most frequently is peer group animosity. Teenagers can be cruel, especially to those who are in some way different from them. They need to have information about how to treat people generally, irrespective of sexual orientation, and the lack of this information could have dangerous consequences. The new law will not reduce the number of teenage suicides, an indicator where Russia is one of the world leaders. Our data lead us to believe that 26% of gays and lesbians in Russia have tried at least one to commit suicide and for many this was during their teenage years.
On 1 May 2012 a demonstration was held in St Petersburg, with police permission. Ten people were arrested, so it will serve as a typical example of the enforcement of this law. Demonstrators included members of the city's human rights organisations and LGBT activists carrying their rainbow flag.
The police arrests were rough: ten activists carrying the flag were seized with no explanation and taken to a police van. As soon as the arrests started, all the people marching in the democratic column came to a halt. They demanded that the police release the detainees, but they clearly had no intention of doing this, so the organisers of the democratic column took the decision to move the Rainbow Flag to the head of their section of the march, thus preventing the police from carrying out further arrests. Without the support and solidarity of the other organisations, the continued presence of the LGBT representatives on the march would not have been possible. Among the organisers with similar democratic beliefs were: the Petersburg division of the un-registered party PARNAS, the 'Solidarity Movement', the Russian People's Democratic Union, the Libertarian Party and the Regional Division of the 'Yabloko' Party. When they reached Konyushennaya Square, where the march was to end, the demonstration began; another seven people were arrested, all of whom were carrying banners protesting against state homophobia.
On 1 June 2012 a festival was to have opened in Kemerovo. Ten days earlier, the festival organisers began receiving threats of physical violence from ultra-rightwing groups in Novokuznetsk. The organisers immediately made a statement to the Kemerovo police about these threats; this was followed by meetings with representatives of the uniformed services and the city authorities. At these meetings, the authorities refused to take any measures to protect festival organisers or visitors. Law enforcement officers and people from the city authorities used psychological pressure to try and make the organisers cancel the event. As a direct result of the law enforcement agencies' refusal to act, the threats of violence and murder continued. The Kemerovo Festival was effectively ruined and one of the volunteers was attacked in the centre of the city. A case has been opened relating to this attack.
6 June 2012 was the second day of the LGBT Film Festival 'Side by side' in Novosibirsk. On that day groups of aggressively-minded young men gathered at the festival venue and made homophobic remarks about the participants. Their actions and conversations made it perfectly clear that they were preparing an attack. There were quite a few police officers present, but requests from the organisers to clear the young men from the area in front of the cinema were ignored. The organisers were compelled to send visitors away in taxis; they themselves escaped attack and persecution only by a miracle.
When the political campaign to get regional laws adopted at federal level began, activists presciently noted that all 20th century totalitarian regimes had cracked down on sexual minorities before all other dissidents. The expectation that these laws would result other groups being harassed as well have been proved correct sooner than we expected. The Pussy Riot sentence, which is so iniquitously and absurdly cruel, the law on 'foreign agents' and other similar recent measures are clear evidence that Russia today is closer to totalitarianism than ever before in the post-Soviet period.
The first victims of the new‘witch hunt’ were the LGBT communities in several regions of the Russian Federation (Ryazan, Kostroma, Arkhangelsk, Magadan, Novosibirsk, the Samara oblast, Krasnoyarsk Krai and city of St Petersburg [11]). Each of these regions introduced laws establishing administrative responsibility for the so-called ‘promotion of homosexuality among minors.’ A similar draft law is currently under consideration at the federal level. Moreover, the enforcement of these laws has already demonstrated that the concepts enshrined in them lack legal clarity, so they can be used arbitrarily to prevent the free expression of opinions and the holding of peaceful demonstrations by people defending equal rights irrespective of sexual orientation or gender identity. The police arrest people who call publicly for homophobic crimes to be investigated, who walk the streets with the rainbow flag and, even, who intend to hold a demonstration in defence of LGBT rights.
In view of the developing social and political crisis, the Russian government wants to make a political factor of homophobia so as to curry favour with that section of the public, which is least well educated and informed, and running scared. The wilful whipping up of these feelings could turn a general atmosphere (‘everyday homophobia’) into an important channel for social discontent, aimed at certain groups of people, in this case homosexuals, bisexuals and transgenders. It is essentially a form of political populism and it is dangerous because irresponsible politicians could split society, rather than uniting it, and provoke the growth of enmity and social tension.
The LGBT community
In Russia intolerance, aggression and political crackdowns relating to the LGBT community are connected with the fact that for many centuries their ‘invisibility’ and ‘sense of inadequacy' were taken for granted, including by the members of the community themselves. They were forced by prejudice to conceal themselves and to adapt. For a long time the very idea of free self-expression or the organised defence of their rights and human dignity seemed an impossibility to them.'In view of the developing social and political crisis, the Russian government wants to make a political factor of homophobia so as to curry favour with that section of the public, which is least well educated and informed, and running scared.'The situation has started changing over the last few years in Russia. The LGBT community is becoming more visible and socially active. From invisible 'sinners' and 'criminals' they are turning into proud and free people who want to be happy and live openly in their surroundings. This complicated process conflicts with established stereotypes, which are easy to exploit in various political games.
The laws banning the 'promotion of homosexuality' are formally aimed at the protection of minors. That is the letter of these laws, but their spirit bans people from saying what they think, forbidding them the freedom of choice, and, thus, we see today that the verbiage about the law being for the protection of children is simply the letter of the law which is of no interest to even its creators or its users.
From the formal legal point of view, there are the regulations enshrined in international law and also the Constitution of the Russian Federation, which states that people's rights and freedoms may be restricted only when it is essential for the protection of life and limb, the health and morals of others. In our case the adjustments proposed by the members of the Legislative Assembly clearly restrict the right to disseminate information. The question then arises, how the dissemination of information about homosexuality, lesbianism, bisexualism or transgender as objectively existing phenomena could be harmful. The idea that someone would go into a school to hand out information about sex between men or between women is unimaginable.
‘For a long time the very idea of free self-expression or the organised defence of their rights and human dignity seemed an impossibility to them. The situation has started changing over the last few years in Russia. From invisible 'sinners' and 'criminals', the LGBT community is turning into proud and free people who want to be happy and live openly in their surroundings.’LGBT activists protesting this law are indeed engaging in promotion, but it is the promotion of tolerance and respect for all people irrespective of their sexual orientation. We are disseminating information about the social and legal problems endured by homosexuals and transgenders and I can see nothing immoral in this, and certainly nothing which could be a danger to life or health.
Minors also have need of this information. Sexual orientation is formed and recognised long before the age of 18. Our society considers man heterosexual from birth, so when a teenager at 12/13 suddenly begins to realise he is attracted by people of the same sex, he gets scared and feels guilty. These teenagers really need objective, popular information about homosexuality and transgender from specialists, rather than from parliamentary deputies who are unreservedly ignorant. Heterosexual teenagers need this too.
One of the problems homosexual teenagers encounter most frequently is peer group animosity. Teenagers can be cruel, especially to those who are in some way different from them. They need to have information about how to treat people generally, irrespective of sexual orientation, and the lack of this information could have dangerous consequences. The new law will not reduce the number of teenage suicides, an indicator where Russia is one of the world leaders. Our data lead us to believe that 26% of gays and lesbians in Russia have tried at least one to commit suicide and for many this was during their teenage years.
The fightback
The laws, which have already been snappily called 'Don't say gay!', have been operational in various regions for more than six months, over which period dozens of people have been arrested, mainly in St Petersburg.On 1 May 2012 a demonstration was held in St Petersburg, with police permission. Ten people were arrested, so it will serve as a typical example of the enforcement of this law. Demonstrators included members of the city's human rights organisations and LGBT activists carrying their rainbow flag.
The police arrests were rough: ten activists carrying the flag were seized with no explanation and taken to a police van. As soon as the arrests started, all the people marching in the democratic column came to a halt. They demanded that the police release the detainees, but they clearly had no intention of doing this, so the organisers of the democratic column took the decision to move the Rainbow Flag to the head of their section of the march, thus preventing the police from carrying out further arrests. Without the support and solidarity of the other organisations, the continued presence of the LGBT representatives on the march would not have been possible. Among the organisers with similar democratic beliefs were: the Petersburg division of the un-registered party PARNAS, the 'Solidarity Movement', the Russian People's Democratic Union, the Libertarian Party and the Regional Division of the 'Yabloko' Party. When they reached Konyushennaya Square, where the march was to end, the demonstration began; another seven people were arrested, all of whom were carrying banners protesting against state homophobia.
‘The authorities have effectively legalised aggression and violence against LGBT. The police and local administrations often openly refuse to police LGBT events to protect the activists from the threats and aggression of ultra-rightwing groups and religious fanatics.’Of the several hundred marchers, only those protesting against the homophobia of Russian society and state were arrested. Although some of the protesters were told straight out when they were detained that they were in contravention of the Article on 'gay propaganda', not one of the indictments contained any reference to the said Article. The detainees were accused of taking part in an unsanctioned demonstration in Konyushennaya Square and refusing to comply with the demands of police officers. At the court hearings, the detained protestors insisted that the Democratic March in defence of citizens' rights and freedoms had been sanctioned by the City Administration. The slogans on the banners of those arrested, 'Homophobia is illegal', moreover, did not conflict with the declared aim of the march, i.e. that any infringement of the rights of homosexuals, lesbians, bisexuals or transgenders was unacceptable. The human rights campaigners had studied the case files and the evidence, so they did not expect the court to find that the activists had committed an offence. This is indeed what happened and the case was thrown out. But this decision concerned only five of the activists; the other twelve have not yet been brought to court.
Legitimisation of violence
The laws have yet another clear consequence: the authorities have effectively legalised aggression and violence against LGBT. The police and local administrations often openly refuse to police LGBT events to protect the activists from the threats and aggression of ultra-rightwing groups and religious fanatics.On 1 June 2012 a festival was to have opened in Kemerovo. Ten days earlier, the festival organisers began receiving threats of physical violence from ultra-rightwing groups in Novokuznetsk. The organisers immediately made a statement to the Kemerovo police about these threats; this was followed by meetings with representatives of the uniformed services and the city authorities. At these meetings, the authorities refused to take any measures to protect festival organisers or visitors. Law enforcement officers and people from the city authorities used psychological pressure to try and make the organisers cancel the event. As a direct result of the law enforcement agencies' refusal to act, the threats of violence and murder continued. The Kemerovo Festival was effectively ruined and one of the volunteers was attacked in the centre of the city. A case has been opened relating to this attack.
6 June 2012 was the second day of the LGBT Film Festival 'Side by side' in Novosibirsk. On that day groups of aggressively-minded young men gathered at the festival venue and made homophobic remarks about the participants. Their actions and conversations made it perfectly clear that they were preparing an attack. There were quite a few police officers present, but requests from the organisers to clear the young men from the area in front of the cinema were ignored. The organisers were compelled to send visitors away in taxis; they themselves escaped attack and persecution only by a miracle.
When the political campaign to get regional laws adopted at federal level began, activists presciently noted that all 20th century totalitarian regimes had cracked down on sexual minorities before all other dissidents. The expectation that these laws would result other groups being harassed as well have been proved correct sooner than we expected. The Pussy Riot sentence, which is so iniquitously and absurdly cruel, the law on 'foreign agents' and other similar recent measures are clear evidence that Russia today is closer to totalitarianism than ever before in the post-Soviet period.
Country or region:
Russia
City:
St. Petersburg
Kemerovo
Topics:
Civil society
About the author
Igor Kochetkov is well known Russian LGBT rights defender. He is chairman of the Russian LGBT Network. Together with other LGTB activists he was arrested during a peaceful May Day March in St Petersburg.
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Read On
Gay Pride Parade Banned for 100 Years in Russia [12], Human Rights First website, June 7, 2012
Gay Russia [13] LGBT NGO based in Moscow
Krilya [14] (Wings) LGBT NGO based in St Petersburg
LGBT History: Russia (en) [15], glbtq website
The Sexual Revolution in Russia: Sexual Politics from the Age of the Czars to Today, by Igor S. Kon, Simon and Schuster, 1995, 337 pages
Gay Russia [13] LGBT NGO based in Moscow
Krilya [14] (Wings) LGBT NGO based in St Petersburg
LGBT History: Russia (en) [15], glbtq website
The Sexual Revolution in Russia: Sexual Politics from the Age of the Czars to Today, by Igor S. Kon, Simon and Schuster, 1995, 337 pages
More On
For Human Rights Watch work on Russia,please, see: Reports
Briefings
NewReleases
http://www.hrw.org/news/
2012/07/15/russia-remembering-natalia-estemirova-and-why-her-courage-lives [23]
2012/07/15/russia-remembering-natalia-estemirova-and-why-her-courage-lives [23]
http://www.hrw.org/news/
2012/05/08/russia-investigate-police-use-force-against-peaceful-protesters [32]
2012/05/08/russia-investigate-police-use-force-against-peaceful-protesters [32]
And MuchMore at HRW’s Russia page
This article is published under a Creative Commons licence. If you have any queries about republishing please contact us [46]. Please check individual images for licensing details.
Links:
[1] http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/igor-kochetkov
[2] http://www.opendemocracy.net/topics/civil-society
[3] http://www.opendemocracy.net/countries/russia
[4] http://www.opendemocracy.net/cities/kemerovo
[5] http://www.opendemocracy.net/cities/st-petersburg-0
[6] http://www.opendemocracy.net/russia/topics/politics
[7] http://www.opendemocracy.net/russia/topics/human-rights
[8] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia-debates/russian-rights-at-crossroads
[9] http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php
[10] http://twitter.com/share?text=Pride, prejudice — just ‘don’t say gay’ in Russia
[11] http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/mar/12/st-petersburg-bans-homosexual-propaganda
[12] http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/2012/06/07/gay-pride-parade-banned-for-100-years-in-russia/
[13] http://www.gayrussia.eu/m/en/
[14] http://www.krilija.sp.ru/en/index.html
[15] http://www.glbtq.com/social-sciences/russia,8.html
[16] http://www.hrw.org/reports/2011/03/10/you-dress-according-their-rules-0
[17] http://www.hrw.org/reports/2009/09/28/who-will-tell-me-what-happened-my-son-0
[18] http://www.hrw.org/reports/2009/07/02/what-your-children-do-will-touch-upon-you-0
[19] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/03/01/russia-harassment-critics
[20] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/01/26/russia-expert-testimony-situation-human-rights-defenders
[21] http://www.hrw.org/news/2011/11/14/russia-making-justice-count-chechnya
[22] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/16/russia-criminal-libel-law-blow-free-expression
[23] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/15/russia-remembering-natalia-estemirova-and-why-her-courage-lives
[24] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/13/russia-bring-natalia-estemirova-s-murderers-justice
[25] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/13/russia-reject-proposed-changes-rules-foreign-funded-ngos
[26] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/17/russia-olympics-launch-sochi-abuses-loom
[27] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/14/russia-five-journalists-detained
[28] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/09/russia-protect-human-rights-lawyer
[29] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/08/russia-reject-restrictions-peaceful-assembly
[30] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/07/russia-protect-human-rights-defenders-chechnya
[31] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/01/russia-eu-should-raise-lgbt-issues-summit
[32] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/05/08/russia-investigate-police-use-force-against-peaceful-protesters
[33] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/04/26/russia-wearing-pink-triangle-crime
[34] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/04/19/russia-move-investigate-police-abuses
[35] http://www.hrw.org/europecentral-asia/russia
[36] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/alexander-verkhovsky/nationalists-and-protest-movement
[37] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/yury-dzhibladze/russian-government-declares-%E2%80%98cold-war%E2%80%99-on-civil-society
[38] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/anna-sevortian-tanya-lokshina/russian-rights-at-crossroads
[39] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/alexander-cherkasov/government-%E2%80%94-main-source-of-instability-in-northern-caucasus
[40] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/augusto-come/russia%E2%80%99s-queer-democratisation
[41] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/elena-fanailova/sexually-liberated-or-just-badly-brought-up
[42] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/lyubov-borusyak/in-memoriam-igor-kon-personal-view
[43] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/augusto-come/on-putin-berlusconi-and-chimpanzees
[44] http://od-odrussia.disqus.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.opendemocracy.net%2Fod-russia%2Figor-kochetkov%2Fpride-prejudice-%25E2%2580%2594-just-%25E2%2580%2598don%25E2%2580%2599t-say-gay%25E2%2580%2599-in-russia
[45] http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
[46] http://www.opendemocracy.net/contact
[1] http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/igor-kochetkov
[2] http://www.opendemocracy.net/topics/civil-society
[3] http://www.opendemocracy.net/countries/russia
[4] http://www.opendemocracy.net/cities/kemerovo
[5] http://www.opendemocracy.net/cities/st-petersburg-0
[6] http://www.opendemocracy.net/russia/topics/politics
[7] http://www.opendemocracy.net/russia/topics/human-rights
[8] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia-debates/russian-rights-at-crossroads
[9] http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php
[10] http://twitter.com/share?text=Pride, prejudice — just ‘don’t say gay’ in Russia
[11] http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/mar/12/st-petersburg-bans-homosexual-propaganda
[12] http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/2012/06/07/gay-pride-parade-banned-for-100-years-in-russia/
[13] http://www.gayrussia.eu/m/en/
[14] http://www.krilija.sp.ru/en/index.html
[15] http://www.glbtq.com/social-sciences/russia,8.html
[16] http://www.hrw.org/reports/2011/03/10/you-dress-according-their-rules-0
[17] http://www.hrw.org/reports/2009/09/28/who-will-tell-me-what-happened-my-son-0
[18] http://www.hrw.org/reports/2009/07/02/what-your-children-do-will-touch-upon-you-0
[19] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/03/01/russia-harassment-critics
[20] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/01/26/russia-expert-testimony-situation-human-rights-defenders
[21] http://www.hrw.org/news/2011/11/14/russia-making-justice-count-chechnya
[22] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/16/russia-criminal-libel-law-blow-free-expression
[23] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/15/russia-remembering-natalia-estemirova-and-why-her-courage-lives
[24] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/13/russia-bring-natalia-estemirova-s-murderers-justice
[25] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/13/russia-reject-proposed-changes-rules-foreign-funded-ngos
[26] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/07/17/russia-olympics-launch-sochi-abuses-loom
[27] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/14/russia-five-journalists-detained
[28] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/09/russia-protect-human-rights-lawyer
[29] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/08/russia-reject-restrictions-peaceful-assembly
[30] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/07/russia-protect-human-rights-defenders-chechnya
[31] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/01/russia-eu-should-raise-lgbt-issues-summit
[32] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/05/08/russia-investigate-police-use-force-against-peaceful-protesters
[33] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/04/26/russia-wearing-pink-triangle-crime
[34] http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/04/19/russia-move-investigate-police-abuses
[35] http://www.hrw.org/europecentral-asia/russia
[36] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/alexander-verkhovsky/nationalists-and-protest-movement
[37] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/yury-dzhibladze/russian-government-declares-%E2%80%98cold-war%E2%80%99-on-civil-society
[38] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/anna-sevortian-tanya-lokshina/russian-rights-at-crossroads
[39] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/alexander-cherkasov/government-%E2%80%94-main-source-of-instability-in-northern-caucasus
[40] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/augusto-come/russia%E2%80%99s-queer-democratisation
[41] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/elena-fanailova/sexually-liberated-or-just-badly-brought-up
[42] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/lyubov-borusyak/in-memoriam-igor-kon-personal-view
[43] http://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/augusto-come/on-putin-berlusconi-and-chimpanzees
[44] http://od-odrussia.disqus.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.opendemocracy.net%2Fod-russia%2Figor-kochetkov%2Fpride-prejudice-%25E2%2580%2594-just-%25E2%2580%2598don%25E2%2580%2599t-say-gay%25E2%2580%2599-in-russia
[45] http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
[46] http://www.opendemocracy.net/contact
Thursday, August 23, 2012
THE HISTORICAL TRAGEDY OF RUSSIAN BYZANTISM
Mike
Nova
The essence of this subject is Russian Byzantism and its historical failure and tragedy. Both State and Orthodox Church in their uneasy but strategic partnership ("Symphony") served as means and tools of enslavement, and slavery, both spiritual (religious) and real (social and economic) was the hallmark and the very texture of life in all its aspects in Byzantium and later in what we now call Russia. In the case of the latter it was compounded by the enormous, deadly, crashing impact of mongol-tatar invasion. This is not marxist, but common sense analysis. Now it came to a breaking point because this "symphonic" model cannot sustain itself any longer, it simply does not work. I think we (or future generations) will see the long overdue process of "protestanisation" of ROC and inevitable social, economic and territorial break-up of Russia as we know it.
*
Богородица плачет - Александр Морозов
Byzantism
Russian Byzantism - Google Search
Византизм - Google Search
русский византизм - Google Search
Konstantin Leontiev - From Wikipedia
Леонтьев, Константин Николаевич - Материал из Википедии
Византизм и славянство (1875)
Mike Nova shared a link
"Леонтьев – поэт аутентичности, которая в переводе именуется словом "самобытность". У Леонтьева панэстетическое мышление, из духа которого выросла современная гей-культура."
"мы по-прежнему не осознали роль византизма..."
Mike Nova commented on a link:
*
THE HISTORICAL TRAGEDY OF RUSSIAN BYZANTISM
The essence of this subject is Russian Byzantism and its historical failure and tragedy. Both State and Orthodox Church in their uneasy but strategic partnership ("Symphony") served as means and tools of enslavement, and slavery, both spiritual (religious) and real (social and economic) was the hallmark and the very texture of life in all its aspects in Byzantium and later in what we now call Russia. In the case of the latter it was compounded by the enormous, deadly, crashing impact of mongol-tatar invasion. This is not marxist, but common sense analysis. Now it came to a breaking point because this "symphonic" model cannot sustain itself any longer, it simply does not work. I think we (or future generations) will see the long overdue process of "protestanisation" of ROC and inevitable social, economic and territorial break-up of Russia as we know it.
*
Богородица плачет - Александр Морозов
Byzantism
Russian Byzantism - Google Search
Византизм - Google Search
русский византизм - Google Search
Konstantin Leontiev - From Wikipedia
Леонтьев, Константин Николаевич - Материал из Википедии
Византизм и славянство (1875)
Mike Nova shared a link
Византизм как симулякр самосознания
russ.ru
Леонтьев - лучший из идеологов рабской официальной народности, которая позволяет, с одной стороны, стирать различия между народом и быдлом, а с другой - заменять представительство символикой былого или грядущего величия.
"Леонтьев – поэт аутентичности, которая в переводе именуется словом "самобытность". У Леонтьева панэстетическое мышление, из духа которого выросла современная гей-культура."
"мы по-прежнему не осознали роль византизма..."
Mike Nova commented on a link:
Words, words, words.
*
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Pussy Riot - Press Review: 8:18 AM 8/22/2012
Last Update: 1:40 PM 9/8/2012
Vovchik!
Khoroshaya u tebya dochka: krasivaya i umnitsa, no i svoyenravnaya, konechno, chto i ne udivitelno; oni vse seychas takiye. A te devochki, chto, ne tvoi dochki? I u dvoikh po rebyonku. Vipusti ikh pryamo seychas, legalniy pretext naydyotsa. Potushi pozhar. I, glavnoye: pust Tserkov znayet svoyo mesto, khvatit etogo litsemeriya. Vsya eta vizantiyskaya "symphoniya" davno uzhe prevratilas v kakophoniyu, yesli ne khuzhe. Oni tebe sovershenno ne nuzhni, no, glavnoye: oni sovershenno ne nuzhni sovremennomu gosudarstvu. Ot nikh tolko problemi. Razdeleniye Tserkvi i Gosudarstva imeyet davnuyu i glubokuyu istoricheskuyu mudrost i traditsiyu. Vera ili neveriye - eto lichnoye i chastnoye delo kazhdogo i s gosudarstvennim upravleniyem smeshivatsa nikak ne dolzhni. Tsarevitch, podtverdi: ti zhe zakonnik. Yuridicheski, etot Pussy Riot dolzhen rassmatrivatsa kak forma politicheskogo i khudozhestvennogo protesta, i tolko. Nikakoy ugolovshini i huliganisma zdes net. I yesli Kirillu eto ne nravitsa, pust pishet zhalobi v svoi sobstvenniye visshiye instantsii.
Kak khochu, tak svoim perom i vorochu: eto - moy avtorskiy stil.
Press Review:
Pussy Riot Was Carefully Calibrated for Protest - New York Times
It's its own form of culture jam, a savvy reference to feminist and musical history — riot grrrl and Susie Bright, as well as a wink to women's appropriation of sexual agency and bodily power. Madonna has worn Pussy Riot's name on her bare skin, a ...
Jailed Pussy Riot Trio Gets Fundraiser, Show in Chelsea - Businessweek
Pussy Riot sentence brings dissent to the masses - Washington Post
______________________________________________________________________
Vovchik!
Khoroshaya u tebya dochka: krasivaya i umnitsa, no i svoyenravnaya, konechno, chto i ne udivitelno; oni vse seychas takiye. A te devochki, chto, ne tvoi dochki? I u dvoikh po rebyonku. Vipusti ikh pryamo seychas, legalniy pretext naydyotsa. Potushi pozhar. I, glavnoye: pust Tserkov znayet svoyo mesto, khvatit etogo litsemeriya. Vsya eta vizantiyskaya "symphoniya" davno uzhe prevratilas v kakophoniyu, yesli ne khuzhe. Oni tebe sovershenno ne nuzhni, no, glavnoye: oni sovershenno ne nuzhni sovremennomu gosudarstvu. Ot nikh tolko problemi. Razdeleniye Tserkvi i Gosudarstva imeyet davnuyu i glubokuyu istoricheskuyu mudrost i traditsiyu. Vera ili neveriye - eto lichnoye i chastnoye delo kazhdogo i s gosudarstvennim upravleniyem smeshivatsa nikak ne dolzhni. Tsarevitch, podtverdi: ti zhe zakonnik. Yuridicheski, etot Pussy Riot dolzhen rassmatrivatsa kak forma politicheskogo i khudozhestvennogo protesta, i tolko. Nikakoy ugolovshini i huliganisma zdes net. I yesli Kirillu eto ne nravitsa, pust pishet zhalobi v svoi sobstvenniye visshiye instantsii.
___________________________________________________________
Kak khochu, tak svoim perom i vorochu: eto - moy avtorskiy stil.
_______________________________________
Press Review:
Pussy Riot Was Carefully Calibrated for Protest - New York Times
It's its own form of culture jam, a savvy reference to feminist and musical history — riot grrrl and Susie Bright, as well as a wink to women's appropriation of sexual agency and bodily power. Madonna has worn Pussy Riot's name on her bare skin, a ...
Jailed Pussy Riot Trio Gets Fundraiser, Show in Chelsea - Businessweek
Pussy Riot sentence brings dissent to the masses - Washington Post
______________________________________________________________________
"RW - Pussy Riot" bundle created by Mike Nova
A bundle is a collection of blogs and websites hand-selected by your friend on a particular topic or interest. You can keep up to date with them all in one place by subscribing in Google Reader.
There are
3 feeds included in this bundle
- Uploads by PussRiot
- Pussy Riot - Google News
- Pussy Riot - Google Blog Search
Subscribe
_______________________________________________________________
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/22/12
New York Times |
Pussy Riot Was Carefully Calibrated for Protest
New York Times It's its own form of culture jam, a savvy reference to feminist and musical history — riot grrrl and Susie Bright, as well as a wink to women's appropriation of sexual agency and bodily power. Madonna has worn Pussy Riot's name on her bare skin, a ... Jailed Pussy Riot Trio Gets Fundraiser, Show in ChelseaBusinessweek Pussy Riot sentence brings dissent to the massesWashington Post Jailed Russia Trio Gets Fundraiser, Show in ChelseaBloomberg Town Hall -Examiner.com -Christian Science Monitor all 413 news articles » |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/22/12
Crackdown on Pussy Riot Has History – Analysis
RIA Novosti Years before Pussy Riot, who last week were given two years behind bars for a “punk prayer” at a church, activists of the now-banned National Bolshevik Party, or NBP, were being slapped with prison terms for acts of civil disobedience bordering on art ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Pussy Riot Songs Added to 'Protest' Station on Slacker Radio
Mashable One of four Pussy Riot songs — “Kill the Sexist,” “Putin Wet Himself,” “Kropotkin Vodka” and “Deliver Pavement” — will launch the “Protest Songs” the first time you listen to it. The songs, which are in Russian, aren't available on iTunes, Spotify or ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
San Francisco Chronicle |
Website of court that sentenced Pussy Riot hacked
San Francisco Chronicle MOSCOW (AP) — Russian hackers on Tuesday attacked the website of the Moscow court where three members of the Pussy Riot punk band were tried and sentenced to two years in prison for an irreverent protest. The Russian offshoot of the loose-knit ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Christian Science Monitor |
Jailed Pussy Riot Trio Gets Fundraiser, Show in Chelsea
Businessweek The three Pussy Riot members who were sentenced to two years in prison last week will become the centerpiece of a Sept. 10 pop-up exhibition and fundraiser in New York backed by Amnesty International. Five videos of the group -- which comprises not ... Pussy Riot sentence brings dissent to the massesWashington Post How Pussy Riot Bamboozled the MediaTown Hall Photos: Pussy Riot arrests highlight U.S. obscenity and blasphemy lawsExaminer.com Christian Science Monitor -Huffington Post all 359 news articles » |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Kodak, Pussy Riot, News Corp.: Intellectual Property
Bloomberg Pussy Riot, the all-female Russian band sentenced to two years in jail after its protest in a Moscow cathedral, has begun the process of registering its name as a trademark, the Moscow News reported. Mark Feigin, the feminist band's lawyer, said the ... and more » |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
SF Weekly (blog) |
Pussy Riot Trial: A Worldwide Outrage, Thanks to the Internet
SF Weekly (blog) Three members of Russian punk band Pussy Riot, having been sentenced to two years' hard labor for the crime of "hooliganism motivated by religious hatred" have seemingly lost their battle for free speech against President Vladimir Putin's regressive ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Pussy Riot, new punk legends
Salon Pussy Riot, new punk legends Members of the female punk band "Pussy Riot" (R-L) Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Yekaterina Samutsevich and Maria Alyokhina sit in a glass-walled cage after a court hearing in Moscow, August 17, 2012. A judge sentenced three ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google Blog Search by Andrey Tselikov on 8/21/12
Due to the shameful events of the last months, and especially due to the unjust verdict for Pussy Riot, rendered with direct instigation by the Russian Orthodox Church and the people who mistakenly call themselves “Orthodox ...
via Pussy Riot - Google Blog Search by Anna Heim on 8/20/12
Yahoo! posted one of the most obnoxious tweets we have seen in quite a while.
via Pussy Riot - Google Blog Search by Glenn Peoples, Nashville on 8/21/12
Slacker announced Monday it added four tracks by the now-famous Russian punk group Pussy Riot to its catalog as well as its Protest Radio station -- here's how and why they...
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Website of court that sentenced Pussy Riot hacked
MiamiHerald.com 17, 2012 file photo, feminist punk group Pussy Riot members, from left, Maria Alekhina, Yekaterina Samutsevich, and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova show the court's verdict as they sit in a glass cage at a courtroom in Moscow. The two-year prison sentence ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
The Guardian |
Have Pussy Riot sparked a new wave of grrl power?
The Guardian The London feminist choir Gaggle are another group who have much in common with Pussy Riot: both are shape-shifting collectives of clever women spreading messages of protest and social awareness, often while wearing brightly coloured capes. I asked ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/20/12
Pussy Riot Copycats Demonstrate at Cathedral in Germany
The Moscow Times On Friday, Pussy Riot members Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 22, Maria Alyokhina, 24 and Yekaterina Samutsevich, 30, were given two-year prison sentences for their participation in that "punk prayer," in which they denounced Patriarch Kirill for calling on ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Christian Science Monitor |
Pussy Riot sentence brings dissent to the masses
Washington Post “Topless Woman Cuts Down Kiev Cross for Pussy Riot.” That headline ran at the top of a South African Web site a few days ago, accompanied by a picture of a half-naked member of a radical feminist group, chainsaw in hand, protesting the two-year jail ... Anti-Putin Hackers Seize Moscow Court's Web Site, Posting Calls to 'Free Pussy ...New York Times (blog) Pussy Riot got what they deservedBaltimore Sun Moscow court responsible for sentencing Pussy Riot hackedChristian Science Monitor CBS News -ABC7Chicago.com all 323 news articles » |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
The Guardian |
Pussy Riot members face threat of violence in Russian jail, lawyer warns
The Guardian "It seems that the planned and well-orchestrated provocation called 'Pussy Riot' succeeded," Vladimir Yakunin, the Kremlin-connected head of Russian Railways and a high-profile supporter of the Orthodox church, wrote this week. The group, he said, was ... |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Pussy Riot got what they deserved
Baltimore Sun I applaud Russian authorities for convicting "Pussy Riot" — the very name suggesting sex and violence — of committing a hate crime against religion. The all girl punk band willfully, maliciously and blasphemously desecrated a Russian Orthodox Church. |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
TIME |
Hackers target website of Russian court that jailed Pussy Riot
Reuters Anti-Kremlin, pro-Pussy Riot slogans appear on site. * Pussy Riot verdict drew international criticism. By Gabriela Baczynska. MOSCOW, Aug 21 (Reuters) - The website of a Moscow court that convicted three members of punk band Pussy Riot to two years in ... The Priest Who Beat Pussy Riot: The Orthodox Point Man with the KremlinTIME We must all stand with Pussy RiotNew York Daily News Pussy Riot and Four Other Bands That Lost the Battle with Authority But Won ...Riverfront Times (blog) Wall Street Journal (blog) -Forbes -Christian Science Monitor all 1,486 news articles » |
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
I Love You, Todd Akin. You Make Me Want to Put on a Balaclava and Riot.
New York Magazine Sometimes I'm surprised that Pussy Riot is cool. Even young Americans who voted for Obama and supported Occupy Wall Street tend to turn up our noses at the aesthetics of domestic protest culture: ski masks, body paint, white dreads, Bono. Yet even ... and more » |
via Pussy Riot - Google Blog Search by RT on 8/21/12
Unidentified hackers broke into the official website of a Moscow court which sentenced three Pussy Riot band members to two years in jail. For some time its front page was defaced with obscenities and video clip of a ...
____________________________________________________
Jailed Pussy Riot Trio Gets Fundraiser, Show in Chelsea - Businessweek
via Pussy Riot - Google News on 8/21/12
Christian Science Monitor |
Jailed Pussy Riot Trio Gets Fundraiser, Show in Chelsea
Businessweek The three Pussy Riot members who were sentenced to two years in prison last week will become the centerpiece of a Sept. 10 pop-up exhibition and fundraiser in New York backed by Amnesty International. Five videos of the group -- which comprises not ... Pussy Riot sentence brings dissent to the massesWashington Post How Pussy Riot Bamboozled the MediaTown Hall Photos: Pussy Riot arrests highlight U.S. obscenity and blasphemy lawsExaminer.com Christian Science Monitor -Huffington Post all 359 news articles » |
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