Wednesday, February 12, 2014

WSJ on Sochi-14: Yammer & Sickle: Russians Can't Live Down Lake Placid

Yammer & Sickle: Russians Can't Live Down Lake Placid

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Updated Feb. 12, 2014 12:34 a.m. ET
Forget the Many Other Times When We Destroyed You
The Russians in Sochi can't live down memories of a 34-year-old miracle.
The Soviet Union's loss to an underdog Team USA at the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics loomed large as Russia's men's hockey squad met the media for the first time on Tuesday in a news conference attended by virtually the whole team, as well as a standing-room-only crowd of reporters.
Asked about the significance of that game, Russian Ice Hockey Federation President Vladislav Tretiak first reminded the several hundred journalists in attendance that the "Miracle on Ice" represented a brief interlude in decades of Soviet hockey dominance.
"I want to say that in '84 we fixed our mistake and again became Olympic champions," Tretiak said, to applause from the Russian press corps.
Tretiak, who was back then the Soviet Union's star goaltender, was famously pulled from the net by coach Viktor Tikhonov in the first period of that game. On Tuesday, Mr. Tretiak went on to try to put a positive spin on the repercussions of the loss.
"In 1980, they really created a miracle," Mr. Tretiak said. "After that, hockey started developing strongly in America."
—Anton Troianovski
Health Worker to Sochi Locals: You Don't Look a Day Over 82
The Olympics are supposed to inspire people to shape up and go for their inner gold, right?
In Russia, maybe not quite. A quarter of men here die before they are 55, according to a study in the Lancet journal, largely from drinking too much vodka. More than 60% of Russian men and 22% of Russian women over 15 smoke, according to the World Health Organization.
Stats like those are precisely what has prompted a local organization called "Choice" to set up a health expo on a sidewalk in downtown Sochi during the Games. "What is your bio-age? Find out today," reads a banner advertising the event.
Dozens of Russians were having their height, weight and blood pressure measured on Monday afternoon as part of the free program. They stepped up and down repeatedly on a stool while a volunteer monitored their heart rates.
At the end of the line, a volunteer entered all participants' measurements into a computer program, which spit out the age their bodies really are.
"For me it's probably 90," Inna Tishkova, a 68-year-old doctor, said as she waited with her husband for her results. "I'm healthy but overweight."
Sure enough, the computer said she should be 82. As for her husband, Eduard, a 77-year-old retired nuclear submarine commander, the computer said he should be 79. "You should stop drinking alcohol," said the volunteer who gave him his results.
"Give up beer?" Mr. Tishkov said. "What are you trying to suggest?"
—Betsy McKay
Even This Move's Name Has A High Degree of Difficulty
At Wednesday's ski slopestyle competition, American and medal favorite Nick Goepper will perform a trick that has the sport's insiders buzzing. In it, he launches himself backward off a snowy ramp, does two flips and 2½ spins simultaneously while crossing his skis and grabbing one of them from behind—all before straightening out and landing.
He calls it the Switch Double Rodeo 900 Screamin' Seaman. But who was the original Screamin' Seaman? Some people—including Goepper—believe it is named for Chris Seemann, a coach of the U.S. freestyle ski team and a former competitor in the event of aerials, in which skiers do flipping, twisting tricks off one giant jump. But Coach Seemann said the trick was actually named after another man with a similar name.
That would be Curt Seaman, a pro freestyle skier in the 1970s. Seaman, reached by phone at his home in Fairbanks, Alaska, had heard that young skiers had adopted and updated the Screamin' Seaman but didn't know that it had become the staple of an Olympian. "He's going to get a lot of high scores if he's throwing those," Seaman said. "That's really cool."
—Rachel Bachman
Costas's Eye Infection Finally Too Icky for NBC to Stand
Bob Costas was swilling his vodka. It was Tuesday morning in NBC's studios in Sochi when Costas, the face of the network's Olympics coverage, clinked glasses with his colleague Mary Carillo. He also pointed to his face.
"My eyes can't get any redder," he said. "Here we go. Down the hatch!"
In the opening minutes of NBC's first broadcast last week, a bespectacled Costas announced he was staring down an eye issue, having woken up with one eye swollen shut by a viral infection. It spread to his other eye for Monday's broadcast. His blurry and sensitive eyes made it impossible for Costas to complete his hosting duties, he said. For now, Matt Lauer will replace Costas on the network's prime-time and late-night Olympics broadcasts, part of a package that cost the network $775 million.
Tuesday would be the first night since 1988 that someone other than Costas hosted NBC's prime-time Olympics show, according to NBC publicists. The network has listed its star anchor as day-to-day, and Costas said he hoped for a quick improvement.
"The last thing I want to do is go through the rest of my life owing Matt Lauer a bunch of favors," Costas said in a news release.
—Ben Cohen
Kelly Clarkson and Kelly Clark Are Two Different People
Snowboarder Kelly Clark Getty Images
Singer Kelly Clarkson NBC
Kelly Clark is pretty famous. The American snowboarder is a four-time Winter Olympian with two medals in the women's halfpipe, and she's expected to win another medal in Wednesday's final.
But Clark isn't "American Idol" famous. That explains why it says atop her Wikipedia page: "Not to be confused with Kelly Clarkson." Nonetheless, Clark often is confused with Clarkson—especially on Twitter.
"I would say at least five times a week I get some pretty funny Kelly Clarkson misinterpretations, like, 'I love your music,' or 'Congratulations on getting married!' " Clark said.
Not only do the women have very similar names, they also vaguely resemble each other and are close in age: Clark (Twitter handle @KellyClarkFdn, for her charitable foundation) is 30, a year younger than Clarkson (@Kelly_Clarkson). They also had their breakout performances in 2002: Clarkson won "Idol" and Clark won the Olympic halfpipe gold medal.
One Clarkson fan tweeted: "MUSIC IS LOVE THANK YOU!!" and included Twitter handles of the Dave Matthews Band, U2, the Doobie Brothers … and Kelly Clark.
The snowboarder often gets news of Clarkson milestones first. Last June, a radio station in Raleigh, N.C., tweeted: "@Kellyclarkfdn lost her canary yellow engagement ring! Find out what happened." Clark also learned of Clarkson's pregnancy and the release of her Christmas album.
A spokeswoman for Clarkson said she was unavailable for comment because she was "enjoying time with her new family and preparing for her baby." But of course, Clark already knew that.
—R.B.
IOC Responds to Questions About Gender Differences
The International Olympic Committee on Tuesday tried to address a lingering question: Why so many differences between the men's and women's events at the Winter Games?
Sandrine Tonge, a spokesman for the IOC, told The Wall Street Journal that the Olympic events slate "is established with the active contribution of the international federations and contains similarities and distinctions between the two genders. In cross country and biathlon for example, there are similarities in sprints while traditionally, the long distances are shorter for women."
This is only partly true. The women's sprint Tuesday was 1.3 kilometers, compared with the 1.8-kilometer men's track, a significant relative difference.
Tonge also wrote that the international federations "review the format of their competitions" after each Olympics and that the IOC relies on the federations' expertise to make proposals about any changes to events. She added that the IOC believes it is important that events in the Games correspond to events run by the federations, such as World Cup competitions.
In other words, don't blame the IOC. It is the international federations that set the standard race distances.
—Matthew Futterman
Despite Tuesday's Outcome, Shaun White's Still a Rock Star
It may seem like Shaun White was trying to shed his rock-star image by cutting his famous locks. Turns out, White is actually a real, live rock star.
White is the guitarist for the rock band Bad Things, a quintet that just released its debut album for Warner Bros. Records. So far, at least, the band doesn't appear to be trying too hard to traffic in White's fame as a world-class snowboarder and skateboarder. He appears, stone-faced, in some promotional photos, but some of the band's shots don't even include him.
After he failed to defend his gold medal in the men's halfpipe on Tuesday, White said, "I'm planning to go out and play some music" and that he had "a tour to look forward to."
As for the music, Bad Things has a poppy rock sound with some catchy guitar licks from White. In one of the band's online videos, he can be seen shredding a solo at last year's Lollapalooza in Chicago.
—Nathan Becker
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Russia's Ban on Alcohol in Sochi Arenas Leaves Drinkers Flat

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Feb. 11, 2014 10:53 p.m. ET
Fans at the Sochi Games crowd a rare tap serving beer in Olympic Park. Brian Costa/The Wall Street Journal
SOCHI, Russia—At long last, Morgan Simms thought. Inside the Olympic curling center Tuesday afternoon, the 25-year-old Canadian spotted a welcome sign—Beer.
"I got excited," he said. But like most beer sold inside the Olympic Park, these cans of Russian brew Baltika were nonalcoholic. "They're just playing games with my heart," he said.
Russia, whose most famous export may be vodka, is staging the driest Olympics in memory. For many fans, it is the biggest upset of the Winter Games. A new federal law last year prohibited the sale of alcohol inside sports stadiums and arenas. And a local ordinance last month banned alcohol sales within 50 meters of some sports venues.
The strict approach reflects both the Kremlin's recent efforts to wean Russians from their legendary love of the sauce, and the unpleasant memories of drunken, unruly fans at the last Winter Games in Vancouver.
For the Sochi Games, real beer is a scarce commodity in the Olympic Park, and vodka even rarer. "We were looking for a sports bar or something, but we haven't seen one," said 26-year-old Alyona Minakova of St. Petersburg, walking with her twin sister near the speedskating arena Tuesday. "It seems like there should be one."
In the mountain Olympic venues, which are outdoors and not subject to restrictions, the alcohol flows freely. At the snowboard halfpipe Tuesday, fans drank from cans of alcoholic Baltika and cups of mulled wine.
But at indoor ice venues along the Black Sea, drinking options are limited. The lone restaurant in the Olympic Park has a full bar. And alcoholic beer is sold at two Coca-Cola food stand areas and a larger food court. But with so much nonalcoholic beer on sale, the real thing is hard to find.
"It's not advertised very well," said Canadian visitor Erin Gagne, 27. "We had no idea they sold beer at the Coke tent until we asked someone."
Alcohol sales restrictions were a deterrent to potential beer sponsors. Heineken was the official beer of the London and Athens Summer Games but had never sponsored the Winter Olympics. "I must say that, Sochi, we weren't too keen to become the sponsor of the Winter Olympics," and alcohol restrictions were one consideration, said Hans Erik Tuijt, the company's Global Director of Activation.
A rare sight in Sochi
Baltika is the official beer supplier of the Sochi Games.
The sober atmosphere is a departure from past Games. In 2010, drunken revelers in downtown Vancouver made headlines for their bad behavior. While the Summer Games had no such problems in 2012, it wasn't for a lack of fuel. In London, red wine and Heineken beer was served at all sporting venues except the one owned by the Salvation Army.
Even Utah, the state with the most restrictive alcohol laws in the U.S., loosened the taps ahead of the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, allowing booze in some public spaces where it was normally prohibited.
Sochi is trending the other way. During Russia's official receptions at the Vancouver Games, vodka and whiskey flowed from imitation gasoline pumps. But following Russia's poor showing, the Kremlin banned alcohol at receptions for athletes and Russian officials at the London Games two years later.
"Olympic values are not compatible with the consumption of alcohol," a government spokesman told a Russian newspaper at the time.
The sentiment has surprised some foreign visitors, particularly at events where drinking is common in other countries. "Who wants to watch curling sober?" said Scott Simms, the 27-year-old brother of Morgan Simms. "No one. I'll tell you that right now."
Just off the Olympic Park, temporary fan houses offer alcohol to visiting countrymen. The Canada house, for instance, has a refrigerated dispenser of Molson beer, free with a swipe of a Canadian passport. But entry to the houses is often limited to visitors with ties to national Olympic committees.
Russia's restrictions concern more than sports. In 2009, the government declared war on alcoholism in an effort to reverse dismal life expectancy rates, particularly among men. Since then, the government has raised taxes on alcohol, increased restrictions on sales and banned alcohol advertising.
Still, Russia ranks fourth in the world in total alcohol consumed per capita, behind Moldova, the Czech Republic and Hungary, according to 2011 World Health Organization statistics.
Russians inside the Olympic Park on Tuesday said they generally supported the restrictions, particularly on vodka and other liquor.
"You don't want to mix vodka and sports," said Ivan Polezhayev, a 24-year-old regional government employee.
"The English drink at stadiums," said 62-year-old Alexandr Kalashnikov of Moscow, leaning against an empty vendor's booth with Baltika beer taps. "We don't."
Others said they wouldn't mind a drink.
"It would help to have a little vodka here because people who don't have tickets to the competitions get cold outside," said Ildar Khairetdinov, a 40-year-old driver from Bashkortostan, who was sitting at an outdoor table in the park.
Then he qualified his remarks. "There should be some here, but not enough for someone to buy a whole bottle," he said. "Having a lot of vodka here is harmful for a Russian person."
Sitting across the table, Meri Kameneva, a 36-year-old Sochi resident, complained she waited in line for a beer and when it came her turn all that was left was a warm beer made especially for the Games, a Baltika concoction of cinnamon, vanilla, clove, ginger, honey and alcohol.
Ms. Kameneva made a face as she sipped. "I don't like it, " she said.
—Betsy McKay, Joshua Robinson, Lukas Alpert, Gregory L. White and Kevin Helliker contributed to this article.
Write to Brian Costa at brian.costa@wsj.com
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And the Sochi Crowd Goes Mild

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Updated Feb. 11, 2014 11:42 p.m. ET
Russian fans can be noisy. And at the Winter Olympics, Sochi's Russia Fan House wants them to be noisy too. Just not too noisy. WSJ's Dipti Kapadia finds out exactly why Russia wants its fans to be a bit toned down.
Sochi, Russia
Russia built a "fans house" the size of a warehouse near the entrance to Olympic Park to get the home crowd for Team Russia fired up. Just not too fired up.
"We don't want people to be too active and bother the athletes or the fans from other countries," said Yevgeny Tkachev, spokesman for the fan house, where visitors can meet former Olympians and test their own fitness. "We're not trying to turn people into sports fanatics."
The hundreds of thousands of Russians with tickets to the Winter Games have so far been more stoic than stoked, more Bolshoi than Boston Garden.
Tkachev wants fans warmed up but not noisy. Horns? That would be a nyet. "We don't give out anything that makes noise," he said.
In Sochi, there is little to rival the earthshaking "U-S-A" chants of big American crowds, or the deafening vuvuzela horns that blared at the South African soccer World Cup in 2010. Even the British overcame their stiff-upper-lip DNA with effusive, often emotional outpourings at the 2012 LondonOlympics.
The Russian crowd occasionally chants "Ros-see-ya," Russian for Russia, but rarely for more than a few beats.
At some venues, they are drowned out by smaller groups of fans from rowdier countries, including the Dutch. The biggest ruckus supported by the Russian fan house is the quiet thumping of the inflatable red, white and blue sticks it gives away.
Russians tend to be more restrained because "it's seen as indecent to highlight joy about your own victory if it's been won at someone else's expense," said Vladimir Aseyev, a psychologist at the Russian Academy of Sciences. "That's the way people have always been brought up."
In Russian culture, open displays of emotion are strictly regulated.
The home crowd at these Games is offering polite rather than raucous support for Russian athletes.Reuters
"Emotions definitely run high, but we do not jump up and down like the Japanese or the Chinese," said Alexei Musharin, academic director at the Moscow Institute of Physical Culture and Sport. "Our pride for our athletes does not depend on how we show it. If a Russian is sober, then he can be quite reserved in how he expresses emotions."
And sober is the word at the Sochi Olympics, where most beer is nonalcoholic and stronger stuff is harder to find than tickets to the hockey final.
Hometown fans are expected to be on their best behavior.
Vladimir Pozner, a popular TV journalist, complained to a Russian radio station this week about fans hitting the exits before visiting athletes finished their events: "Not everyone leaves, but the stadium empties out noticeably. That's disrespectful to the others."
Locals attribute the relative reserve to the fear of making a bad impression before a global audience. "One should behave in a dignified way," said Sochi resident Larisa Merkulova. "We've been waiting so long for this and we want to show ourselves in the right light."
Merkulova arrived Monday at Olympic Park to root for Russian speedskaters. She carried a flag, and wore sparkly red, blue and white flags painted on her cheeks and a colorful antennae on her head.
"We're feeling good," she said, but promised nonetheless to maintain her composure.
The Russian crowd has had its moments. At Monday's short-track speedskating competition, fans greeted Viktor Ahn, a favorite from the Russian team, with a roar that drowned out the bell for the start of the final lap.
In 2012, hundreds of people took to Moscow streets to celebrate Russia clinching the World Ice Hockey Championships with a victory over Slovakia. Crowds waved flags and shouted "Russia! Russia!" while cars sounded horns through the night.
Fans also flooded the streets in 2009 when Russia beat Canada to win its first hockey championship since 1993.
Some Russians say the Sochi crowds are just warming up.
"The Olympics just started," said Grigory Byrukov, a 25-year-old resident of Voronezh, who watched a curling match. "When Russians start to win many medals, I think we will root more."
He chalked up the quiet crowds to inexperience. "For many people, it's their first Olympics," Byrukov said. "They've never been here. They don't know how to root."
Byrukov predicted that would soon change.
"Wait until hockey," he said. "That will be one hell of a show, for sure. Just wait."
—Olga Razumovskaya, Brian Costa and Nonna Fomenko contributed to this article.
Write to Gregory L. White at greg.white@wsj.com

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

The Slow Process of Brain Death: the Crisis of Science and the State of Scientific Research in modern Russia


Белка в колесе - Google Search

Вручение президентских премий молодым учёным - 11 февраля 2014 года, 17:50  Москва, Кремль

Crisis of Russian Science - Google Search

  1. Russians face up to their outer-space crisis - Technology & science ...

    www.nbcnews.com/...science.../russians-face-their-spac...

    NBCNews.com
    Sep 28, 2012 - In the wake of a string of setbacks, Russia's top space officials acknowledge that the country's aerospace industry is in deep, deep trouble.
Crisis of Scientific Research in Russia - Google Search

The Continuing Crisis in Russian Science


Nearly a fifth of scientists are considering abandoning the U.S.


Science in the New Russia: Crisis, Aid, Reform
by Loren R Graham  (Author) , Irina Dezhina (Author) , Loren R. Graham  (Author)

Science in the New Russia: Crisis, Aid, Reform - Google Books

Front Cover
Indiana University Press, 2008 - History - 193 pages

The Russian science establishment was one of the largest in the world, boasting many Nobel prizes, a world-leading space program, and famous schools in mathematics, physics, and other fields. However, when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the major financial supports for the scientific community were eliminated, with resulting "brain drain." The subsequent expansion of capitalism and globalization revealed that Russian science was ill adapted to compete with other countries in high technology. Science in the New Russia tells the dramatic story of the near collapse of Russian science in the mid-1990s and of subsequent domestic and international efforts to reform and reenergize scientific activity in Russia.
More »

Russian science odyssey

"The most important and persistent legacy of Soviet science is the seemingly dysfunctional separation between its three organizational “pyramids,” with theoretical and advanced research still dominated by the Russian Academy of Science and its research institutes (with similar academy structures in agriculture, medicine, and pedagogy); technical and applied research separated into economic or industrial branch ministries, much of which has been lost as enterprises have been privatized or experienced cuts in state funding; and a third pyramid of state universities and specialized professional institutes, which focus on undergraduate and graduate education but often with only weak research capacity. Finally, another enduring legacy was the pervasive militarization of science in the Soviet system, which bred yet more organizational barriers and lack of transparency."
...

"The most useful aspect of the volume for international readers will be the authors’ detailed descriptions and evaluations of the massive and historically unprecedented international assistance programs that sought first to support and then to transform post-Soviet science, higher education, and research. These programs, funded by an array of governments and multilateral organizations, amounted to several billion U.S. dollars (when related programs in energy, nuclear nonproliferation, and agricultural research are included), and offered support in the form of individual grants, international travel and long-term professional exchanges, the purchase of scientific equipment and publications, collaborative research projects, and institutional support."
...

"Efforts were also launched to disseminate new information technologies throughout Russian education and government and to restore state funding for scientific research, most notably through a series of massive federal grants for innovative university projects and investments in areas such as aerospace and aircraft design, biotechnology, and nanotechnology."
...

"A key turning point came after 2001, when the highest reaches of the political leadership seemed to recognize the necessity of a coherent science policy and adequate state or public investment for the competitiveness of the Russian economy and began ambitious efforts to better coordinate venture capital with technological innovation, as well as to link together the research capacity of Academy institutes with the educational programs of universities."
...

"Russian science might soon reclaim its status in the world community and thereby just possibly be able to more directly contribute to the resolution of our common scientific and technological challenges in the 21st century."

M.N.: I doubt it very much.

Sources of Scientific Creativity - Google Search

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Crisis of Social Sciences in Russia - Google Search

Is there Google in Russia? - Google Search

Monday, February 10, 2014

V. Putin: Три с половиной иероглифа



M.N.: V. Putin: Три с половиной иероглифа.



"Я и сам был такой когда-то: маленький, невинный, хороший и пушистый. А теперь меня всё кортизоном качают..."

А надо ли? Виагра в предсмертной агонии наврядли поможет...



"Но надо, чтобы это всё было пролонгировано, чтобы это продолжалось и в следующие годы, а может быть, и десятилетия."

M.N.: А надо ли? Виагра в предсмертной агонии наврядли поможет... Но главное: а надо ли?

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Заодно и поговорите...



1/3 Фото пресс-службы Президента РоссииВо время посещения австрийского Тирольского дома в Красной Поляне. С легендарным горнолыжником Карлом Шранцем.9 февраля 2014 года 
"Красный Тиролец"... А спинка-то - прямая как доска, застывшая... Болит, болит, вижу. А ты - расслабся, спортом займись, а лучше всего - сексом; хоть гейским, хоть анти-гейским, что больше нравится... Поможет... Если, конечно, всё ещё можешь. Виагру прими, или в баньку сходи с Януковичем - он большой и добрый. Заодно и поговорите. 

2/3 Фото пресс-службы Президента РоссииНа командных соревнованиях по фигурному катанию во Дворце зимнего спорта «Айсберг». Слева от Президента – Министр спорта Виталий Мутко, справа – президент Международного союза конькобежцев Оттавио Чинкванта.9 февраля 2014 года
Роджэр, Роджэр: мессидж понял. Сам такой. Читай Биона, лечи элиту, а то - сожрут...

Friday, February 7, 2014

Putin as a voyeur: "Приём от имени Президента России в честь гостей Олимпиады"



Приём от имени Президента России в честь гостей Олимпиады

Russian top official seemingly admitted to spying on hotel guests in their bathrooms!



Deputy Prime Minister Lets Slip Comment About Surveillance in Sochi Hotel Rooms

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An attempt to defend Russia from a wave of reports about faulty infrastructure in Sochi by pointing the finger at guests backfired when a top official seemingly admitted to spying on hotel guests in their bathrooms.
"We have surveillance video from the hotels that shows people turn on the shower, direct the nozzle at the wall and then leave the room for the whole day," Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak said during a press conference on Thursday, seemingly unaware the statement would provoke more questions on how the footage was obtained in the first place.
When a reporter tried to ask a follow-up question, an aide led Kozak away, saying they were going to tour the Olympic media center, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Later on Thursday a spokesman for Kozak said that there is no surveillance in guests' hotel rooms, but that video cameras had been used while construction and cleaning activities were ongoing, and that his boss must have been referring to footage obtained at that time.
The spokesman did not explain how, if that were true, the footage Kozak referred to could have featured guests.
In the run up to the Winter Olympics, which officially starts on Feb. 7, Western journalists in the Black Sea resort have reported a lack of running warm water, doorknobs, collapsing curtains and stray dogs among the problems they encountered upon arrival.
Kozak, who was in charge of preparations for the Games, said he had no "claims against Western or Russian journalists who are doing their jobs," but added the Olympic project had been a great success, considering the facilities were built on an "open field."
"We've put 100,000 guests in rooms and only got 103 registered complaints and every one of those is being taken care of," Kozak said.
"There are some imperfections, but victors don't have to justify themselves," he said in an interview with television channel Rossia 24 on Thursday. 

A Spotlight on Mr. Putin’s Russia - NYTimes Editorial

A Spotlight on Mr. Putin’s Russia

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The Olympic Games that open in Sochi, Russia, on Friday are intended to be the fulfillment of President Vladimir Putin’s quest for prestige and power on the world stage. But the reality of Mr. Putin and the Russia he leads conflicts starkly with Olympic ideals and fundamental human rights. There is no way to ignore the dark side — the soul-crushing repression, the cruel new antigay and blasphemy laws and the corrupt legal system in which political dissidents are sentenced to lengthy terms on false charges.
Maria Alyokhina, 25, and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 24, of Pussy Riot, the Russian punk band, are determined that the glossy celebration of the Olympics will not whitewash the reality of Mr. Putin’s Russia, which they know from experience. Charged with “hooliganism,” they were incarcerated for 21 months for performing an anti-Putin song on the altar of a Moscow cathedral that cast the Russian Orthodox Church as a tool of the state.
Such political protest is not tolerated in a nation that is a long way from a democracy. In December, the women were freed under a new amnesty law that was an attempt by Mr. Putin to soften his authoritarian image before the Olympics.
But if he thought releasing the two women from prison would silence them, he miscalculated badly. On Wednesday, they told The Times’s editorial board that their imprisonment, and the international support it rallied to their cause, had emboldened them. They plan to keep criticizing Mr. Putin — they were hilarious on Stephen Colbert’s show the night before — and working for prison and judicial reform. Their resolve and strength of character are inspiring.
There is a lot of work to do, beginning with the cases of eight people who are now on trial, charged with mass disorder at a protest at Bolotnaya Square in Moscow in 2012 on the eve of Mr. Putin’s third inauguration as president. Amnesty International, which sponsored the Pussy Riot visit to New York, where they appeared at a benefit concert on Wednesday, has called for dropping the charges of incitement to riot against the Bolotnaya demonstrators. The Pussy Riot activists dismissed the charges against those demonstrators as baseless and more evidence of “Putin’s way of getting revenge” on his critics.
A Russian prosecutor has demanded prison terms of five and six years for the eight protesters, with the verdict expected a few days before the Olympics end in late February. Ms. Alyokhina and Ms. Tolokonnikova have called for a boycott of the Olympics, or other protests, to pressure the government into freeing the defendants. The most important thing is that the world speak out now, while Mr. Putin is at the center of attention and presumably cares what it thinks.
More broadly, the Russian penal system is in desperate need of reform. The activists described conditions in which prisoners are cowed into “obedient slaves,” forced to work up to 20 hours a day, with food that is little better than refuse. Those who are considered troublemakers can be forced to stand outdoors for hours, regardless of the weather; prohibited from using the bathroom; or beaten.
Their observations are reinforced by the State Department’s 2012 human rights report, which said that limited access to health care, food shortages, abuse by guards and inmates, inadequate sanitation and overcrowding were common in Russian prisons, and that in some the conditions can be life threatening.
The Olympics cannot but put a spotlight on the host country, and despite all efforts to create a more pleasant image of his state, Mr. Putin is facing a growing protest. On Wednesday, more than 200 prominent international authors, including Günter Grass, Salman Rushdie, Margaret Atwood and Jonathan Franzen, published a letter denouncing the “chokehold” they said the new antigay and blasphemy laws place on freedom of expression.
Mr. Putin has unconstrained power to put anyone associated with Pussy Riot and thousands of other political activists in prison. But these women and those who share their commitment to freedom and justice are unlikely to be silenced, and they offer Russia a much better future.