From [TBC] To The Polar Lands - Rolling Russia / "Near Abroad" News Thread

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https://twitter.com/vpkivimaki/status/565652936962084865

nakhchivan, Thursday, 12 February 2015 14:03 (nine years ago) link

Also good value from that link: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/B9me_43IQAE0Sl1.jpg

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Thursday, 12 February 2015 14:11 (nine years ago) link

do you watch any of this series

https://news.vice.com/show/russian-roulette

no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Saturday, 14 February 2015 02:08 (nine years ago) link

I haven't seen many but probably should catch up with them. Vice's reporters are a mixed bag but Harriet Salem is consistently good.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Saturday, 14 February 2015 08:13 (nine years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_rnSF4h22XU

no love deb weep (nakhchivan), Saturday, 14 February 2015 16:20 (nine years ago) link

The UAH is still collapsing, despite the peace accords and IMF funding agreement:

http://i.imgur.com/lXLnTR0.png

Nov 2013: 12 UAH to the GBP
Jan 2015: 22 UAH to the GBP
Feb 2015: 50 UAH to the GBP

The decline against the USD is probably even worse, and more relevant as debt is largely paid, and gas largely bought, in Dollars. Horrific situation.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Wednesday, 25 February 2015 12:18 (nine years ago) link

Yesterday: Russia agreed to provide stabilisation loans to Cyprus.

Today: Cyprus has agreed to let the Russian navy use its ports

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-31632259

"Our friendly ties aren't aimed against anyone," President Putin said. "I don't think it should cause worries anywhere"

Yep, let's see how that works out.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Thursday, 26 February 2015 08:56 (nine years ago) link

boy i sure hope there aren't any other countries in that part of the world desperate for a loan on favourable terms

A MOOC, what's a MOOC? (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 26 February 2015 10:37 (nine years ago) link

This morning alone the UAH went from 50 to the GBP to 43 and then back up to 53. Property is typically priced in USD and a lot of people took out Dollar mortgages when the currency was stable. I can't imagine living with that level of uncertainty.

http://www.euronews.com/2015/02/18/dollar-mortgage-crisis-in-urkaine/

Currently reading an extraordinary story about a Russian guy who ran away from an orphanage in the 1980s and was given a passport in 2004 despite not having a birth certificate. He was arrested in 2013, accused of using false documents, and has been in jail ever since. The Russian police have apparently used an expert in facial matching from photographs to accuse him of being a Ukrainian bank robber / murderer who is thought to be on the run in Russia. Nobody knows where the real criminal is, or if he's still alive, and the dude in prison has no way of proving that it's not actually him. Russia plans to extradite him.

https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=ru&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=https%3A%2F%2Fopenrussia.org%2Fpost%2Fview%2F2974%2F&edit-text=

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Thursday, 26 February 2015 13:17 (nine years ago) link

rip boris nemtsov, shot dead in the street

polyphonic, Friday, 27 February 2015 21:59 (nine years ago) link

Footage from the scene showed police experts examining the corpse of a man, dressed in jeans and lying on the tarmac, with the domes of St Basil’s in the background.

norway srna (nakhchivan), Saturday, 28 February 2015 01:04 (nine years ago) link

My wife: "God, they're so obvious about everything." Me: "The obviousness is the point."

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 28 February 2015 01:26 (nine years ago) link

“Putin noted that this was a cruel murder and bears all the signs of a contract killing which appears exclusively provocative,” Peskov told ITAR-TASS.

panettone for the painfully alone (mayor jingleberries), Saturday, 28 February 2015 02:15 (nine years ago) link

Blimey. For context, he was an extremely marginal figure in electoral terms these days but a very well known activist / critic. Pretty much zero chance that the government was directly involved but entirely plausible the political atmosphere at the moment might have have prompted someone on the fringes to do it. The murder of critics isn't condoned but their demonisation as enemies of Russia is.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Saturday, 28 February 2015 02:39 (nine years ago) link

Peskov / Putin statement pretty much translates to 'someone did this to make us look bad', which is the line taken by the rabid pro-Kremlin bloc online. The idea that Putin ordered the killing, dominating a lot of the chatter outside Russia, is equally unlikely and misses the point.

Given the timing, there is a strong probability this relates to his organisation of protests against Russia's position on Ukraine / Crimea. Those protests would probably have drawn a couple of thousand people (though more now) which is tiny in the context of a country that is, for the most part, supportive of reclaiming Crimea, etc. However, you can't give tacit approval to a legion of bikers, Cossacks, 'orthodox jihadis', military fantasists, rabid nationalists and assorted other cranks and malcontents to fight over the border, stand by while people like Zhirinovsky, the anti-Maidan protesters, and sections of the right-wing press describe their critics as traitors, and then be surprised when they start picking up guns on their return.

There has been a lot of talk about what happens in Ukraine when the neo nazi battalions stop fighting the rebels. Less about what happens in Russia when their nutcases stop fighting with them.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Saturday, 28 February 2015 08:31 (nine years ago) link

yeah, i wouldn't be surprised if all the heavily-armed wackjobs riled up by the ukraine situation become a major problem. putin may regret the forces he's set in motion.

I dunno. (amateurist), Saturday, 28 February 2015 09:18 (nine years ago) link

Looks like the police have found a car with Ingush number plates and they're trying out a Charlie Hebdo link for size. Will probably have a couple of confused day labourers in custody by the end of the week.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Saturday, 28 February 2015 13:05 (nine years ago) link

This is quite interesting:

http://www.themoscowtimes.com/business/article/britain-gives-russian-tycoon-fridman-7-days-to-justify-ownership-of-gas-fields/517031.html

Mikhail Fridman has bought a load of North Sea gas fields as part of the €5bn takeover of a German energy company and the UK government has given a strong indication that it plans to force him to sell them to someone else. He has a week to convince them not to.

Fridman is not affected by the sanctions so, depending on how you look at it, it's either a precautionary measure in case sanctions are extended at some point in the future or another lever to put pressure on Russian business to, in turn, put pressure on the government.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Thursday, 5 March 2015 08:51 (nine years ago) link

The FSB has detained two Chechen men on suspicion of the Nemtsov killing, which will come as a huge surprise to absolutely nobody. They were apparently traced through the getaway car and wire taps.

No word on motive so far, thought there rarely is. A large proportion of hitmen are either Chechen or Russian soldiers who fought there, but they tend not to flip on who paid them.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Saturday, 7 March 2015 12:41 (nine years ago) link

Pretty much zero chance that the government was directly involved but entirely plausible the political atmosphere How did you figure it to be zero?
Maybe not Putin personally or explicitly, but, so close to the Kremlin and St. Basil, sure seems like some level of complicity: at the very least, looking the other way. So either blatantly Look What We Can Do and Fuck You, or a significant hole in the security system.

dow, Saturday, 7 March 2015 15:02 (nine years ago) link

The streets around the Kremlin are open and not all that heavily guarded unless it's right on the perimeter. There are definitely questions around why it took several minutes for anyone to show up on the scene and why some of the security cameras were not working that play into conspiracy theorising but you could shoot someone and drive off pretty easily.

There is no obvious benefit to the goverment in having a minor protest figure shot and a lot of domestic and international risk. The memorial protest was probably at least 20 times bigger than the one he was organising. The treatment of Navalny is much more in line with the Kremlin's standard operating procedure - quashing dissent through targeted legal action. Had Nemtsov been seen as a major threat he would probably have been jailed over 90s corruption allegations. Unless he had something spectacular to reveal, it seems unlikely to me that they would want to bring the negative publicity. Even the most fervent pro-Putin commentators agree this looks terrible - they just claim it was done for that purpose.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Saturday, 7 March 2015 15:21 (nine years ago) link

There's no obvious benefit to a lot of the government's involvements, other than appealing to the worst elements, for political and financial profits, although the resulting sanctions have taken bites out of the latter. Doesn't seem like they care much about how things look to non-Russians. Supposedly, he was about to circulate another pamphlet, with more details about government corruption. Maybe it was just the last straw, for somebody, in or out of the government,

dow, Saturday, 7 March 2015 18:44 (nine years ago) link

There are so many theories it's impossible to ever know for sure. The latest is that it was done to discredit Kadyrov rather than Putin, with the accused shooter being a serving Chechen soldier under his command. Commentators are largely winging it these days.

One political murder that certainly looks somewhat less ambiguous:

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72416

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Saturday, 7 March 2015 21:18 (nine years ago) link

Four suspects now in custody and a fifth apparently killed himself with a grenade when the police came for him in Grozny, which is likely to be taken with a pinch of salt.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Sunday, 8 March 2015 09:24 (nine years ago) link

Kadyrov has issued an odd statement on Instagram (obvs) calling Zaur Dadayev, who has apparently confessed, a great patriotic hero for his service in antiterrorist operations in Chechnya but also saying that he had had left the army for unknown reasons a while ago and hinting he might have gone off the deep end about Charlie Hebdo.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Sunday, 8 March 2015 19:58 (nine years ago) link

There's definitely something odd going on. Putin hasn't been seen for ten days and will, in theory, return for a meeting with the Kyrgyz president today.

Separately, a number of high-profile opposition activists, including Ksenia Sobchak, have been apparently given a heads-up by the FSB that the people who organised the Nemtsov murder are also after them. Sobchak has left Russia but it looks like a few very close Putin allies have also left abruptly with no explanation, including Vladislav Surkov - Putin's chief advisor on a number of issues, including the Caucasus.

This has led to speculation about attempted coups, rogue units in the Chechen special forces, a Kadyrov power-grab, an anti-Kadyrov campaign, etc, etc.

Kadyrov has affirmed his loyalty to Putin via Instagram but fueled the speculation by saying that the loyalty was independent of whether he was president.

It may well all be blown up out of proportion but the failure to manage the sense that something strange is happening is telling in itself.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Monday, 16 March 2015 07:26 (nine years ago) link

For example, Hromadske, the Ukrainian US-backed new organisation:

http://youtu.be/f358z2_PMXo

The suggestion there is that there is an open conflict between the Kadyrov clan and the FSB (Russian state security bureau) and that Putin, who has very strong ties to Kadyrov, is caught in the middle.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Monday, 16 March 2015 07:36 (nine years ago) link

Viktor Yanukovich Jr. may or may not have drowned at the weekend. Nobody seems to know for sure.

Lots going on in Ukraine. The oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky, governor of Dnipropetrovsk, seems to have led an armed gang into the headquarters of a state oil firm to take issue with the sacking of the director. He funds a variety of militia groups at the moment, which Poroshenko is attempting to tame. The president is quoted as saying there will be no "pocket armies" and has sent two battalions of special forces troops to the city to "keep order". It has the capacity to turn uglier.

Separately, Kolomoisky was accused of a string of murders in a civil case in London between him, Bogolyubov and Pinchuk.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Monday, 23 March 2015 18:09 (nine years ago) link

More on the Kolomoisky / Poroshenko spat:

http://www.kyivpost.com/content/kyiv-post-plus/fight-between-kolomoisky-and-state-turns-ugly-384323.html

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Tuesday, 24 March 2015 19:16 (nine years ago) link

Kolomoisky has now officially been fired as governor of Dniepro for the armed raid on the gas company. That was kind of inevitable if the President is going to have any kind of meaningful authority but you now have a guy with no formal ties to the state bankrolling private militias with approx 15k soldiers. Even before he was fired, some of his supporters were talking about a new anti-Poroshenko Maidan. Hopefully won't come to anything but it's a grim prospect.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Wednesday, 25 March 2015 05:35 (nine years ago) link

http://i.imgur.com/iqNufkG.jpg

lol

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Tuesday, 31 March 2015 07:43 (nine years ago) link

"
There's definitely something odd going on. Putin hasn't been seen for ten days and will, in theory, return for a meeting with the Kyrgyz president today.

Separately, a number of high-profile opposition activists, including Ksenia Sobchak, have been apparently given a heads-up by the FSB that the people who organised the Nemtsov murder are also after them. Sobchak has left Russia but it looks like a few very close Putin allies have also left abruptly with no explanation, including Vladislav Surkov - Putin's chief advisor on a number of issues, including the Caucasus.

This has led to speculation about attempted coups, rogue units in the Chechen special forces, a Kadyrov power-grab, an anti-Kadyrov campaign, etc, etc.

Kadyrov has affirmed his loyalty to Putin via Instagram but fueled the speculation by saying that the loyalty was independent of whether he was president.

It may well all be blown up out of proportion but the failure to manage the sense that something strange is happening is telling in itself."

― Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), lunes 16 de marzo de 2015 7:26

So any idea what all that was about? Seems too odd for it to have been nothing.

.robin., Tuesday, 31 March 2015 08:45 (nine years ago) link

To be honest, not really. A lot of the speculation was overstated apparently - Sobchak never left, Surkov turned up two days later, etc.

The underlying theme of tension between Kadyrov and the FSB seems to have more weight to it, though, and there doesn't seem to be any explanation for Putin's vanishing act. There have been a lot of articles about Kadyrov pushing for a wider national role and issues with his militia being active outside of Chechnya (both overtly in Ukraine and covertly with targeted assassinations) but most of it has been from the Western press a lot is quite contradictory.

Rainbow DAESH (ShariVari), Tuesday, 31 March 2015 09:38 (nine years ago) link

thought this was interesting, on battery farming/crowdsourcing propaganda:

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/apr/02/putin-kremlin-inside-russian-troll-house

sktsh, Thursday, 2 April 2015 10:19 (nine years ago) link

Yep, Shaun Walker has been doing some good stuff lately.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 2 April 2015 11:11 (nine years ago) link

http://nationalinterest.org/feature/face-the-coming-war-between-armenia-azerbaijan-12585

This seems to be kicking off again. Idk whether all-out war is likely.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 9 April 2015 16:28 (nine years ago) link

http://i.imgur.com/dhXBbCD.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/eHpDA0V.jpg

^ senior delegation from the Armenian-American community meeting the PM in Yerevan for crisis talks.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 9 April 2015 22:12 (nine years ago) link

Kim was certainly learning a lot on her day sight-seeing in Armenia's second largest city.

Indeed the 34-year-old looked genuinely moved, not to mention a little overwhelmed, as she later visited the overgrown ruins of her modest ancestral family home.

With rusted sheet metal walls, no roof, and piles of rubble and debris littering the site, the long neglected location was surely a stark reality check for the pampered reality star.

nakhchivan, Saturday, 11 April 2015 20:16 (nine years ago) link

As a way to boost awareness of the Armenian genocide for its 100th anniversary this seems slightly more dignified and effective than i would have expected on paper.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Sunday, 12 April 2015 08:34 (nine years ago) link

Good article from the pro-Ukraine, pro-free-speech Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group on the astonishing new laws being put through the Rada:

http://khpg.org/en/index.php?id=1428632777

They appear to not just give full legal status to the wartime Ukrainian Insurgent Army (who massacred Poles and Jewish Ukrainians) but will ban questioning their legitimacy as a 'denigration of the dignity of the Ukrainian people'.As things stand, the Wiesenthal centre, for example, would fall foul of this.

At the same time, communist symbols / propaganda and the denial of the 'criminal nature' of the 1917 - 1991 regime have been prohibited.

The package of bills was presented in parliament and largely drawn up by the head of the Institute for National Remembrance Volodymyr Viatrovych. The latter was head of the SBU [Security Service] archives under Yushchenko and became widely known for his strong support for nationalist leaders Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych, and OUN-UPA. His works as a historian, for example, his attempts to present the Volyn Massacre “in a wider context” as part of an alleged Polish-Ukrainian war from 1942-1947 have prompted criticism, both from historians and from the wider public. Concern has often been expressed, including by the author of these words, over historical manipulation of facts or downright inaccuracies.

Poland has similar(ish) laws on the books but a much less divisive context. Aside from whether they are right or wrong, it's difficult to see this as anything other than another potentially destabilising move and a boost to the Russian propaganda machine selling the Ukrainian government as far-right ethno-nationalists.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Tuesday, 14 April 2015 08:46 (nine years ago) link

Will read that, but not before expressly wishing that SOAD had been there with Kim et al

PORC EPIC SAVVAGE (imago), Tuesday, 14 April 2015 08:49 (nine years ago) link

Anyway, good article. I especially like how it loses its composure when speaking with no little implication of 'other totally fascist ideologies'. That first law seems utterly bonkers and creepy as fuck.

PORC EPIC SAVVAGE (imago), Tuesday, 14 April 2015 08:58 (nine years ago) link

a boost to the Russian propaganda machine selling the Ukrainian government as far-right ethno-nationalists.

weird how the latter keep falling into this trap huh

Despite some odd provocations (like being pictured with a Stepan Bandera patch on his military shirt) i don't think Poroshenko could really be classed as a far-right ethno-nationalist and there is a fair proportion of the new Ukrainian political set-up that is reasonably liberal but they're over a barrel at the moment.

On one side, you've got the armed right-wing militias who have propped up the army and expect something in return, on the other you've got a lot of nationalist parliamentarians who have been itching to do things like this for twenty years and are going full steam ahead now that the Russian-leaning population is no longer able to provide a democratic block on it.

It leads to stuff like this: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-32216738 Dmytro Yarosh, leader of Pravii Sektor, being appointed to a senior military role.

Clearly a terrible idea, clearly divisive at home and abroad but no political will / ability to stop it.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Tuesday, 14 April 2015 10:57 (nine years ago) link

Putin is doing his annual call-in, which apparently had 2.5m questions from the public raised this year. He's currently being dragged by a British dude who has been farming in Russia for 23 years over milk prices.

http://i.imgur.com/PmkTB1i.jpg?1

He has also confirmed the sale of the S-300 air defense system to Iran.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 16 April 2015 10:17 (nine years ago) link

It looks like the Ukrainian journalist Olesya Buzina has been assassinated in Kyiv this morning.

This is either the ninth or the thirteenth suspicious death of people linked to the former government over the last few months, depending on who you ask. A former MP in Yanukovich's party, Oleg Kalashnikov, died of a gunshot yesterday:

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/apr/15/ousted-ukraine-president-ally-shot-dead

Many of the deaths have been determined to be suicides by the authorities but fuel conspiracy theories about scores being settled. Suicide obvs not a plausible ruling in the Buzina case.

Anton Gerashenko, a senior official at the Ministry of Internal Affairs updated something along the lines of the following on his Facebook page:

It appears that the shooting of witnesses to the Anti-Maidan continues. Anyone who was involved in organising or financing the Anti-Maidan or any other illegal activities against the Maidan revolution and fears a threat to their life should contact the police so as not to follow Kalashnikov and Buzina

I'd imagine it's meant to suggest an internal squabble between anti-government forces but it's not exactly a good look.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 16 April 2015 11:34 (nine years ago) link

Second journalist murdered in Kyiv in 24 hours. This is nuts.

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 16 April 2015 11:39 (nine years ago) link

!?!?

drash, Thursday, 16 April 2015 11:47 (nine years ago) link

Poroshenko statement:

The Head of State has emphasized the need for prompt and transparent investigation of those murders. “It is evident that these crimes have the same origin. Their nature and political sense are clear. It is a deliberate provocation that plays in favor of our enemies. It is aimed at destabilizing the internal political situation in Ukraine and discrediting the political choice of the Ukrainian people,” the Head of State said.

Petro Poroshenko has also noted that solving these resonant crimes was a matter of honor for the law enforcement bodies. “I demand the law enforcement bodies to find the executors and organizers of these murders in no time. Given the resonance of crimes, law enforcers should regularly inform the society on the results of their investigation,” the Ukrainian President emphasized.

It's practically a word-for-word copy of the Peskov statement on Nemtsov's murder - a "provocation" by enemies to "destabilize the internal political situation of the country".

Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 16 April 2015 15:15 (nine years ago) link

Nazarbayev re-elected with 97.5% of the vote.

Petite Lamela (ShariVari), Sunday, 26 April 2015 20:39 (nine years ago) link


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