January 31, 2004 |
Pensioners
from St. Petersbourg are going to appeal to the European Court for
Human Rights in Strasbourg
Rosbalt, January 29, 2004
According to Popov, “their
decision is based on the fact that the Constitutional Court of Russia has
acknowledged as lawful today norms of pension legislation that exclude
from the labour term the years of study and years spent by a woman nursing
a baby.
Deputies
of the State Duma fail to prove any faults in Russian pension legislation
Rosbalt, January 29, 2004
We should note here that the present pension legislation excludes
many periods from the labour term: the years of study in colleges and universities,
military service, service in the police, years spent by a woman nursing
a baby, time on unemployment benefit and some others.
Boris
Vishnevsky: No one has seen the picture “St. George’s Dialogue with
a Serpent”
Zaks.ru, January 27, 2004
At the federal level Vladimir Putin, who is
deeply resenting the values of freedom and democracy, represents the main
consistent opponent of democratic parties, and at the level of St.Petersburg
Valentina Matviyenko represents such an opponent. Both she and the president
represent the same clan and the same vertical of power.
St.
Petersburg. “SPS+YABLOKO” faction created in the Legislative Assembly
Regions.ru, January 28, 2004
According to the Press Service of St. Petersburg’s YABLOKO branch,
the faction includes four representatives from each faction. Coordinators
of the faction are Igor Artemyev (YABLOKO) and Vitali Martynenko (SPS).
Free,
but Not Fair
By Olga Redichkina, Gazeta.ru, January 27, 2004
This is how Europe is expected to describe the elections in Russia.
|
January 30, 2004 |
State
Duma prefers misers
By Aliya Samigullina, Gazeta.ru, January 28, 2004
The Central Electoral Commission
and the Bank of Russia have released the financial results of the State
Duma elections. It turned out that the SPS, which failed to make it into
the Duma, spent the most on its electoral campaign.
|
January 27, 2004 |
"The
Orchestra Greatly Impressed all Davos"
Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky, Gazeta, January 26, 2004
If we speak about Tchaikovsky, Gergiev and
the Mariinsky Theatre, then the interest is huge here. Politics and economy
do not represent any interest.
Those
Who Failed to Pass into the Duma are Fortunate
Elena Bonner about the recent parliamentary and forth coming presidential elections, Novaya Gazeta, January 22, 2004
History, and the "Veshnyakov-style" elections, have given YABLOKO
and the Union of Right-Wing Forces a real opportunity to unite with the
nation under the boycott slogan, anyway, to unite with a considerable
part of the electorate. It would be a great mistake if they did not avail
themselves of this opportunity.
Members
of Right-Wing Parties Offered Jobs
By Vera Sitnina, Vremya Novostei, January 23, 2004
We now have some confirmation of President Vladimir Putin's statement
in December that the losers in the parliamentary campaign should
not despair, as jobs in the executive branch will be found for them.
Economic Development Minister German Gref is expected to have a
new deputy minister soon: YABLOKO deputy leader Igor Artemyev.
Russian
Democratic Party YABLOKO, We are impeding the rapid development
of a Potyomkin Village in Russia
Statement, Novaya Gazeta, January 22, 2004
The present developments are such that the YABLOKO party should not participate
in the presidential elections. It is impossible to conduct an independent
and free election campaign today.
Pulling
for Putin, Russia's upcoming presidential election is no contest
By Christian Caryl and Frank Brown, Newsweek International, January 26, 2004
"There are no elections in Russia anymore, period," contends
liberal politician Grigory Yavlinsky, whose Yabloko party is boycotting
the poll. "Over the past four years Putin has destroyed all
the autonomous elements in Russian society." |
January 26, 2004 |
Lies,
Damn Lies and Police Statistics
By Vladimir Kovalyev, The Moscow Times, January 22, 2004
When the State Duma passed amendments to the Criminal
Code's section on self-defense in February 2002, it seemed as if a big
step had been taken toward developing civilized legislation in the country.
Just a few new lines in the code meant more than 2,000 people who were
jailed for killing their assailants in self-defense were freed.
Authoritarianism
Deposing 'Clan Democracy'
By Alexander Lukin, The Moscow Times, January 21, 2004
What's
happening in Russia today could be described as the consolidation of an
authoritarian regime, or in more popular jargon, the rise of a dictatorship.
A
Coming Out Party at Davos
By Lynn Berry, The Moscow Times, January 23, 2004
Later, when asked to speak again to the whole group, Saakashvili borrowed
a sound bite first spoken by his Russian dinner partner: "He [Shevardnadze]
needed Russia as an enemy, I need Russia as a friend."
|
January 24, 2004 |
Yabloko
Party to Appeal to Court over Violations in Parliamentary Elections
Trud, January 22, 2004
The
Communist party reportedly conducted a parallel vote-counting and announced
that both Yabloko and the Union of Right-Wing Forces (SPS) parties had
overcome the necessary barrier (5%) and that two-thirds of the protocols
used in the election’s state automated system had no legal force.
Zyuganov
and Yavlinsky Will Meet in Court with United Russia
By Rustem Falyakhov and Denis Yermakov, Gazeta, January 22, 2004
Until the end of the week YABLOKO and the CPRF will sign an agreement
and begin work over an application to the Supreme Court. The parties
seek to secure a revision of the results of the parliamentary elections
held in December 2003.
Yabloko
Defiant in Wrap-up of December Vote Results
Rosbalt, January 18, 2003
Yabloko, the political party, has
issued a stinging critique of the Russian political system, a Rosbalt reporter
was told by the party's press service after a meeting of the party's national
presidium wound up very late Thursday night.
|
January 23, 2004 |
Grigory
Yavlinsky will participate in the meeting of the World Economic
Forum in Davos
Special for www.yavlinsky.ru web-site, January 22, 2004
On January 21-25, 2004, the leader of the Russian Democratic
Party YABLOKO
will for the 13th time participate in the annual meeting of the World
Economic Forum in Davos.
The
leader of the Russian Democratic Party YABLOKO Grigory Yavlinsky
participates in the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum which
is taking place in Davos on January 21-25, 2004
Special for www.yavlinsky.ru web-site, January 22, 2004
The official part of Griogry Yavlinsky's schedule contains speeches at
two
sessions of the forum devoted to further development of European integration
and Russia's place in the united Europe, as well as resistance the state's
attack on human rights.
|
January 22, 2004 |
Racism
Case Investigated
The St.Petersburg Times, January 20, 2004
The City Prosecutor's Office has initiated a criminal
case against Yury
Belyayev, head of the Party of Liberty
and editor of newspaper Express Khronika for allegedly publishing an
article inciting attacks on ethnic
Caucasians, Interfax reported Monday.
|
January 21, 2004 |
Who
"Dropped" Yavlinsky and Why Grigory Yavlinsky is ranked eleventh
by independent pollsters
By Olga Kitova, Russkii Kurier, January 20, 2004
Interfax cited a poll by VTsIOM-A, the independent polling
agency headed by Yuri Levada, in which pollsters approached 1,600 respondents
between January 9 and 13. Even Valentina Matvienko and Aman Tuleev are
on the list - but not the Yabloko leader.
Did
We All Vote So Amicably?
By Orkhan Jemal, Novaya Gazeta, January 19, 2004
At the end of last week representatives from the YABLOKO
Party confirmed that their party was ready to contest in court the results
of the [parliamentary] elections. Their vote recount, an alternative to
that of the Central Electoral Commission, demonstrated that in reality
YABLOKO obtained 6% and the SPS 5.12% of the votes.
YABLOKO
says Duma elections were rigged, threatens to go to court
Gazeta.Ru, January 16, 2004
The liberal YABLOKO party intends to file a lawsuit in
connection with numerous violations committed at the recent State Duma
elections.
YABLOKO
will prove in court that "votes were stolen" at the parliamentary
elections
Gzt.Ru, January 16, 2004
"Within one or two months we shall finalise the work - the analysis
of protocols of electoral commissions - and shall accumulate an ample
critical mass of protocols to conduct the fight in court," said Ivanenko
on Ekho Moskvi radio station.
YABLOKO
Party to Contest Parliamentary Election Results
RIA "OREANDA", January 19, 2004
In addition the party confirmed its intention not to announce
any candidate for the RF Presidential Elections planned for March 14,
2004.
YABLOKO
will contest the results of parliamentary elections
Grigory Yavlinsky's website, January 19, 2004
The YABLOKO party is going to contest in court the
results of the parliamentary elections which took place on December 7,
2003. The party thinks that the public should be informed about incidents
of election fraud, and those responsible for the falsification of the
results of the elections should be punished.
|
January 17, 2004 |
Boris
Vishnevsky: YABLOKO is not going to help those providing services
to Vladimir Putin
ZAKS.RU, January 15, 2004
"The self-proclaimed nomination of Irina Khakamada
as a presidential candidate represents provocation by the Kremlin. The
only person to benefit is Vladimir Putin, as he has to create the impression
that democratic forces are participating in the presidential campaign,
a campaign which will obviously be dishonest and not free,"
More
candidates appear
IA MiK, January 15, 2004
Chairman of Sverdlovsk regional branch of the Russian
Democratic Party YABLOKO Yuri Kuznetsov has proposed himself as candidate
for the [by-elections]of deputies of the State Duma in Verkh-Isetskiy
single-mandate electoral district No 162.
YABLOKO's
leadership sharply criticises the political system built in Russia
Press release, January 16, 2004
...The Russian election system has been transformed into a farce.
Key components of the democratic election system are missing: an
independent mass media, independent financing and independent court.
Russian
Democratic Party YABLOKO, Bureau of the Federal Council
Statement, January 15, 2004
...The socio-demographic characteristics of the country have been
continuously deteriorating. The arbitrary rule of the authorities
and police has intensified and aspects of totalitarianism have been
revived in Russia. |
January 15, 2004 |
The
state comes first for Vladimir Putin
Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky by Claudia von Salzen, Tagesspiegel, January 12, 2004
All elements of society are concentrated
in the same hands which resemble the 1930s. This is a semi-Soviet system.
Yavlinsky
Fears Totalitarian Slide
Reuters, January 12, 2004
Yavlinsky, speaking Thursday evening, said Russia has effectively
reverted to a Soviet-style one-party parliament after the December
elections. The pro-Kremlin United Russia party controls two-thirds of
seats
in the State Duma, and Yavlinsky said the other three parties there were
indistinguishable from it on all major issues.
Russia:
A President without Rivals
By Sergei Borisov, Transitions Online, 13 January 2004
Most Russians have never doubted that Putin will be re-elected on 14
March.
And after the overwhelming victory of the pro-Putin United Russia Party
in
the parliamentary elections on
7 December, their conviction turned into a certainty.
Grigory
Yavlinsky: A Western type of democracy will win in Russia in 20-25
years
By Igor Deyev, ITAR-TASS, January 9, 2004
Yavlinsky stressed that the views of his party on the variants of
economic and domestic political developments of the country "considerably
differ" from the point of view of the present Russian leadership
that "has been trying to create an inefficient system of state
capitalism."
Grigory
Yavlinsky: a Potyomkin village has been systematically built in
Russia.
Novaya Gazeta, December 25, 2003
The reason is that elections have ceased to be even relatively democratic
- honest, equal, or fair. With no judiciary independent from the administration,
no independent mass media, no independent sources of funding, there cannot
be real political competition - and that is the essence of elections.
|
January 13, 2004 |
In
Russia, Everything Is Just Getting Started
Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky, Vedomosti, December 29, 2003
...it turned out to be exceptionally
difficult to demonstrate that there is a difference between real democrats
and those who only call themselves democrats. For example, people think
Boris Yeltsin was the main democrat. And it's been impossible to explain
that he wasn't a democrat at all.
|
January 12, 2004 |
Kremlin
brings in unknowns to spice up 'one-sided' poll
By Julius Strauss in Moscow, The Sunday Telegraph (UK), January 12, 2004
In a practice not seen in Russia since Soviet times, the
Kremlin has put
forward its own men to run against Vladimir Putin in presidential elections
in March.
Democratic
forces in full retreat. Putin's autocracy infects the body politic.
By Robert Service, Los Angeles Times, December 21, 2003
Yavlinsky had stood up for universal human
rights, for incorrupt politics and administration, for the rule of law
and social justice. Although he never came close to winning the presidential
races against either Boris Yeltsin or Vladimir Putin, his participation
at least meant that decent values were conserved in the country's discourse.
10
Candidates in a One-Horse Race
By Francesca Mereu, The Moscow Times, January 9, 2004
Nine candidates, including SPS leader Irina Khakamada
and Rodina leader
Sergei
Glazyev, met a year-end deadline to register to run against President
Vladimir
Putin in the March presidential election. But many of the challengers are
Putin
allies or are running at the Kremlin's request, so the election is shaping
up to
be a one-horse race, political analysts said Thursday.
Russian
liberal fears slide to authoritarian rule
By Mark Trevelyan, Reuters, January 9, 2004
Russia's most prominent liberal
says March's
presidential election is a sham, and the country risks sliding towards
totalitarianism under the unchallenged grip of Kremlin chief Vladimir Putin.
|
January 11, 2004 |
Will
Putin Run for Presdiency Against Unknowns?
By Sergei Yuriev, Komsomolskaya Pravda, December 30, 2003
...Putin will apparently run for president
against nobodies like Viktor Anpilov and Herman Sterligov, and Putin's
own supporter Federation Council Speaker Sergei Mironov.
The
Kremlin gets loyal lawmakers and business gets reliable lobbyists
By Vitaly Ivanov, Vedomosti, December 30, 2003
It is hard to say now what the Kremlin was really aiming
to achieve when it sought absolute control over the Duma. Experts usually
list four factors as possible motives. Firstly...
SPS
Puzzled over Irina Khakamada's decision
RIA "Novosti", December 30, 2003
Anyway, it depends on the
next party congress, on January 24, to decide whether the Union of Right-Wing
Forces will back her.
|
January 07, 2004 |
Presidential
Poll Eclipses 2003 Events
By Vladimir Kovalev, St.Petersburg Times, December 30, 2003
"A majority of people went to the polling stations and consciously
voted to
turn the country back [to the
state] it was 20 to 30 years ago," Vishnevsky said last week in an
interview.
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