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NOVO OGARYOVO
October 25, 2012
*
President Vladimir Putin flatly
rejected on Thursday Western criticism of the imprisonment of the Pussy Riot
punk protest band, saying its three female members deserved their fate because
they threatened the moral foundations of Russia.
*
During
a two-hour dinner conversation with a group of foreign Russia experts, Putin
spent most of his time carefully explaining how his country was trying to
improve the business climate and diversify the economy away from its heavy
dependence on oil and gas by promoting high-tech industries.
The
Kremlin chief said he had “mixed feelings” about a $55 billion state-sponsored
takeover of the country’s number three private oil producer TNK-BP last week
because it increased state-controlled Rosneft’s domination of the energy
sector.
But
Putin said he acted to help BP and put an end to “fistfights” between the
British oil major and its four Soviet-born oligarch partners. “We tried not to
get involved, but when BP managers came to me and the government and said we
want to cooperate with Rosneft, we could not say no,” said Putin. Rosneft is
run by a longtime close Putin ally, Igor Sechin, and the deal will give BP a
stake of nearly 20 percent.
Putin
said he was implementing new laws and reforming the courts to reach a target of
moving Russia up from its 112th place in the annual World Bank rankings for
ease of doing business – below Pakistan – to a top 20 place by 2018.
PUSSY RIOT
But the
president, now in his 13th year running Russia, became animated only when asked
about Pussy Riot during the seven-course meal with the Valdai Club of foreign
journalists and academics at his Stalin-era residence in a wooded compound
outside Moscow.
The
Valdai members were kept waiting in a separate room for an hour and a half for
the meeting, while Putin met a group of factory workers and teachers from the
Volga region to discuss religious cults.
Two
young women from Pussy Riot received two-year prison sentences for “hooliganism
motivated by religious hatred” after performing a crude anti-Putin protest song
in Moscow’s main cathedral. A third band member was released on a suspended
sentence.
At Thursday’s dinner Putin raised his voice, looked straight at the questioner and asked why Westerners who criticized Russia for sending two of the young women to labor camps far from Moscow had not come out in support of a jailed American who made an anti-Muslim hate film.
“Do you want to support people
with such views? If you do, then why do you not support the guy who is sitting
in prison for the film about the Muslims?” the president shot back.
This was an apparent reference to
“The Innocence of Muslims”, a crude hate video that triggered violent protests
across the Islamic world when it was aired on the Internet.
An actress in the film has
identified an Egyptian-born Californian, Mark Basseley Youssef, as its author.
Youssef is currently detained on suspicion of violating his probation terms for
a bank fraud conviction.
“We have red lines beyond which
starts the destruction of the moral foundations of our society,” Putin went on.
“If people cross this line they should be made responsible in line with the
law.” He described Pussy Riot’s protest as “an act of group sex aimed at
hurting religious feelings”.
CLAMPDOWN ON DISSENT
Putin’s comments came amid a
wider clampdown on dissent in Russia, which has included arrests of opposition
leaders on criminal charges and tighter controls on media.
This has led to fears that the
political system, which is highly centralized under the Kremlin, is becoming
increasingly ossified and intolerant.
Putin deflected a question about
the possible stagnation of the system by saying Russia was re-introducing
direct elections for state governors, making it easier for political parties to
register and allowing citizens to petition the state Duma (parliament) directly
with proposals.
Many of the same faces who worked
with Putin when he was deputy mayor of St Petersburg in the early 1990s are
still in senior positions in Moscow in the government and in state companies.
But Putin said around two-thirds
of the members of the government had been changed when he returned to the
Kremlin earlier this year, swapping places with his protégé Dmitry Medvedev,
who is now prime minister.
“I prefer to choose qualified,
experienced people who have proved they can do well,” the president explained.
He rejected suggestions that there were any disputes inside the government in
the wake of the departure just over a year ago of long-time Finance Minister
Alexei Kudrin.
TRADE GOALS
Putin insisted that Russia would
continue to give a high priority to growing its trade with its top business
partner China, aiming to boost bilateral business to $100 billion a year from
current levels of $83.5 billion.
Beijing and Moscow were also keen
to do as much trade as possible in their national currencies, he said, noting
that the rouble was fully convertible and that it was a “matter of time” until
the yuan was, too.
By contrast, he berated the
European Union for its “ridiculous” slowness in agreeing a visa-free regime for
Russia and attacked Brussels for not taking him up on an offer of cooperation
on a new satellite navigation system between the European Galileo system and
Russia’s GLONASS project.
“The EU
has a visa-free regime with certain Latin American countries, and I don’t think
their crime levels are any less than ours,” he said. “I don’t understand this
approach.”
Putin
also had a ready answer for a questioner who enquired how he would stop an
exodus of talented, qualified young people to the West. It was entirely normal,
he said, for young people to study and work in other countries where there was
more money or a good education on offer.
And
what would the president want historians to highlight as the greatest
achievement of his third term in the Kremlin?
“You know, I am never guided by a possible assessment of my work,” Putin said, before highlighting how the economy had doubled in size under his stewardship, average incomes had soared, gold reserves were the world’s fourth biggest, the birth rate had increased ~ all what he termed “modest, positive changes … but not enough”.“We need to create a democratic, effective system of governance so that people feel they are participating,” he said.“We need to create an effective economy which is looking forward and to guarantee the country’s security. I am sure we are capable of solving all these problems.”
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