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Vladimir Putin

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Vladimir Putin, 2nd Wikipedia:President of Russia and current Wikipedia:Prime Minister of Russia has drawn significant[1][2][3][4] domestic and international criticism since his ascension to the Presidency of Russia in 1999.

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Domestic policy[edit]

Domestic terrorism accusations[edit]

Wikipedia:Vladimir Putin was accused of ordering Wikipedia:Russian apartment bombings, a series of five bombings that took place in September 1999, and led the country into the Wikipedia:Second Chechen War. According to a reconstruction of the events by two historians, Wikipedia:Yuri Felshtinsky and Wikipedia:Vladimir Pribylovsky, the bombings may have been conducted by Federal Security Service (FSB) and Wikipedia:GRU Wikipedia:special forces. According to authors:

"The chain of command was as follows: Putin (former director of the secret service, future president) - Patrushev (Putin's successor as director of the secret service) - secret service General Wikipedia:German Ugryumov (director of the counter-terrorism department). Wikipedia:Maxim Lazovsky (the owner of Lanako, the company that employed the secret service agents behind the 1994-5 terrorist attacks) and Lieutenant-Colonel Abubakar were two secret service operatives directly responsible for the practical organization of the bombings "[5]}}

Similar accusations were also made by Wikipedia:Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian state security officer who was later assassinated in London. He wrote two books on the subject, Wikipedia:Blowing up Russia: Terror from within, and Wikipedia:Lubyanka Criminal Group. David Satter did not blame Putin personally, but insisted that the bombings were organized by the Russian FSB to bring him to power.[6]

Researchers and experts such as Gordon Bennett, Wikipedia:Robert Bruce Ware, Paul J. Murphy, Henry Plater-Zyberk, Wikipedia:Peter Reddaway and Wikipedia:Richard Sakwa have criticized these claims, describing them as the conspiracy theories and pointing out, among other things, that the theories' proponents have provided little evidence to support them.[7][8][9][10][11]

Civil liberties and internal dissent[edit]

In 2006 and 2007 "Wikipedia:Dissenters' Marches" were organized by the opposition group Wikipedia:Other Russia,[12] strategized by former chess champion Wikipedia:Garry Kasparov and national-Bolshevist leader Wikipedia:Eduard LimonovTemplate:Citation needed. Following prior warnings, illegal demonstrations in several Russian cities were met by police action, which included interfering with the travel of the protesters and the arrests of as many as 150 people who attempted to break through police lines.[13][14] The Dissenters' Marches have received little support among the Russian general public, according to popular polls.[15] The Dissenters' March in Samara held in May 2007 during the Russia-EU summit attracted more journalists providing coverage of the event than actual participants.[16] When asked in what way the Dissenters' Marches bother him, Putin answered that such marches "shall not prevent other citizens from living a normal life".[17] During the Dissenters' March in Saint Petersburg on March 3, 2007, the protesters blocked automobile traffic on Nevsky Prospect, the central street of the city, much to the disturbance of local drivers.[18][19] The Governor of Saint Petersburg, Wikipedia:Valentina Matvienko, commented on the event that "it is important to give everyone the opportunity to criticize the authorities, but this should be done in a civilized fashion".[19] When asked about Kasparov's arrest, Putin replied that during his arrest Kasparov was speaking English rather than Russian, and suggested that he was targeting a Western audience rather than his own people.[20][21] Putin has said that some domestic critics are being funded and supported by foreign enemies who would prefer to see a weak Russia.[22] In his speech at the Wikipedia:United Russia meeting in Wikipedia:Luzhniki, he said: "Those who oppose us don't want us to realize our plan.... They need a weak, sick state! They need a disorganized and disoriented society, a divided society, so that they can do their deeds behind its back and eat cake on our tab.".[23]

Allegations of political assassinations and muzzling of reporters[edit]

Putin was widely criticized in the West and also by Russian liberals for what many observers considered a wide-scale crackdown on media freedoms. Since the early 1990s, a number of Russian reporters who have covered the situation in Wikipedia:Chechnya, contentious stories on organized crime, state and administrative officials, and large businesses have been killed.[24][25]

On October 7, 2006, Wikipedia:Anna Politkovskaya, a journalist who ran a campaign exposing corruption in the Russian army and its conduct in Wikipedia:Chechnya, and a strong critic of Putin and the FSB, whom she had accused of trying to set up a Soviet-style dictatorship,[26] was killed. She was shot dead in the elevator of her apartment building in Wikipedia:Moscow. The death of this Russian journalist triggered an outcry of criticism of Russia in the Western media, with accusations that, at best, Putin has failed to protect the country's new independent media.

[27][28] When asked about Politkovskaya murder in his interview with the German TV channel ARD, Putin said that her murder brings much more harm to the Russian authorities than her publications.[29]

In his interview with Wikipedia:Izvestia in April 2008, Dmitry Dovgiy from Russia's Prosecutor General's Office said he is convinced that Politkovskaya murder was masterminded by Boris Berezovsky, citing the organizers' intent to "demonstrate that famous people can be murdered [in Russia] in the daylight" without being punished.[30] Dovgiy was convicted in June 2009 for bribe-taking and sent to prison for 9 years.[31] In January 2008, Oleg Panfilov, head of the Center for Journalism in Extreme Situations, maintained that a system of "judicial terrorism" had started against journalists under Putin and that more than 300 criminal cases had been opened against them over the past six years.[32]

At the same time, according to 2005 research by Wikipedia:VCIOM, the share of Russians approving Wikipedia:censorship on TV grew in a year from 63% to 82%; sociologists believed that Russians were not voting in favor of press freedom suppression, but rather for expulsion of ethically doubtful material (such as scenes of violence and sex).[33]

Relations with "oligarchs"[edit]

One of the most controversial aspects of Putin's second term was the continuation of the criminal prosecution of Russia's richest man, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, President of Wikipedia:Yukos oil company, for fraud and tax evasion. While much of the international press saw this as a reaction against Khodorkovsky's funding for political opponents of the Kremlin, both liberal and communist, the Russian government has argued that Khodorkovsky was engaged in corrupting a large segment of the Duma to prevent changes in the tax code aimed at taxing windfall profits and closing offshore tax evasion vehicles. Khodorkovsky's arrest was met positively by the Russian public, who see the oligarchs as thieves who were unjustly enriched and robbed the country of its natural wealth.[34] Many of the initial privatizations, including that of Yukos, are widely believed to have been fraudulent (Yukos, valued at some $30bn in 2004, had been privatized for $110 million), and like other oligarchic groups, the Yukos-Menatep name has been frequently tarred with accusations of links to criminal organizations. Tim Osborne of GML (the majority owner of Yukos) said in February 2008: "Despite claims by President Vladimir Putin that the Kremlin had no interest in bankrupting Yukos, the company's assets were auctioned at below-market value. In addition, new debts suddenly emerged out of nowhere, preventing the company from surviving. The main beneficiary of these tactics was Rosneft. It is clearer now than ever that the expropriation of Yukos was a ploy to put key elements of the energy sector in the hands of Putin's retinue. Moreover, the Yukos affair marked a turning point in Russia's commitment to domestic property rights and the rule of law."[35] The fate of Yukos was seen by western media as a sign of a broader shift toward a system normally described as Wikipedia:state capitalism,[36][37][38] where "the entirety of state-owned and controlled enterprises are run by and for the benefit of the cabal around Putin — a collection of former KGB colleagues, Saint Petersburg lawyers, and other political cronies." [39] Against the backdrop of the Yukos saga, questions were raised about the actual destination of $13.1 billion[40] remitted in October 2005 by the state-run Wikipedia:Gazprom as payment for 75,7% stake in Wikipedia:Sibneft to Millhouse-controlled offshore accounts,[41] after a series of generous dividend payouts and another $3 billion received from Yukos in a failed merger in 2003.[42] In 1996 Wikipedia:Roman Abramovich and Boris Berezovsky had acquired the controlling interest in Sibneft for $100 million within the controversial Wikipedia:loans-for-shares program.[43] Some prominent Yeltsin-era billionaires, such as Wikipedia:Sergey Pugachyov, are reported to continue to enjoy close relationship with Putin's Kremlin.[44]

See also: Political groups during Vladimir Putin's presidency

Environmental concerns[edit]

In 2003, Putin switched the responsibilities for the State Committee for Environmental Protection to the Natural Resources Ministry. The organizations Greenpeace says that the Natural Resources Ministry, NRM, has a history of backing illegal and environmentally hazardous projects. "Russia is now absolutely defenseless against the armada of industrialists and businessmen who impudently rob the country of its natural resources" says the director of Greenpeace in Russia, Sergei Tsyplenkov. "The population of the country is deprived of its basic right, secured by the constitution, the right to a healthy environment." [45] However, in 2004 President Putin signed the Kyoto Protocol treaty designed to reduce green house gasses. Russia's emissions are well below its 1990 levels and it stands to gain by selling carbon credits to countries whose economies have continued to grow.[46]

See also[edit]

References and notes[edit]

  1. Levy, Clifford J. (December 4, 2007). "Putin Basks in Election Win Despite Broad Criticism". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/04/world/europe/04russia.html?hp. Retrieved April 30, 2010. </li>
  2. http://www.carnegieendowment.org/events/?fa=eventDetail&id=745
  3. "Two More Critics of Vladimir Putin Take Bullets in the Head". The Washington Post. January 20, 2009. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/19/AR2009011902604.html. Retrieved April 30, 2010. </li>
  4. "Putin Defends His 'Democracy'". CBS News. May 6, 2005. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/05/06/60minutes/main693422.shtml. </li>
  5. Wikipedia:Yuri Felshtinsky and Wikipedia:Vladimir Pribylovsky) The Age of Assassins. The Rise and Rise of Vladimir Putin, Gibson Square Books, London, 2008, ISBN 190-614207-6, page 106
  6. Wikipedia:David Satter. Darkness at Dawn: The Rise of the Russian Criminal State. Wikipedia:Yale University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-300-09892-8
  7. Sakwa, Richard (2008). Putin, Russia's choice, 2nd, p. 333–334, Routledge.
  8. Vladimir Putin & Russia's Special Services Gordon Bennet, 2002
  9. Western treatment of Russia signifies erosion of reason Dr. Vlad Sobell, 2007. The same article at Russia Profile
  10. Russia Profile Weekly Experts Panel: Russian Presidential Election – Affirming Democracy or Confirming Autocracy?
  11. Sakwa, Richard (2005). Checnya: From Past to Future, Anthem Press.
  12. Kasparov, Building Opposition to Putin
  13. "Garry Kasparov jailed over rally". BBC News. November 24, 2007. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7110910.stm. Retrieved April 30, 2010. </li>
  14. Putin moves against Kasparov and the 'white knight' revolution
  15. VCIOM: Dissenters' Marches Do Not Interest Russians, Regnum.ru, July 3, 2007
  16. There Were Fewer Dissenters' March Participants Than Journalists, RIA News Agency, May 18, 2007
  17. Joint press conference after Russia-EU summit, Samara, May 18, 2007
  18. 100 People Arrested During Dissenters' March in Saint Petersburg, Izvestia, March 5, 2007
  19. 19.0 19.1 Guests from Moscow, RG.ru, March 5, 2007
  20. Interview with Time Magazine, published on December 19, 2007, Kremlin.ru (in English)
  21. Interview with Time Magazine, published on December 19, 2007, Kremlin.ru (in Russian)
  22. Putin attacks the West, opponents
  23. Unity of Forum and Content
  24. CPJ calls on Putin to take responsibility for Politkovskaya murder probe - Committee to Protect Journalists
  25. http://www.cpj.org/Killed.database.FINAL.03.29.07.xls
  26. Politkovskaya, Anna: Putin's Russia (2004)
  27. Putin's Russia failed to protect this brave woman, Joan Smith.
  28. Anna Politkovskaya, Prominent Russian Journalist, Putin Critic and Human Rights Activist, Murdered in Moscow, Democracy Now
  29. Answers on questions asked during interview to ARD TV channel (Germany), Wikipedia:Dresden, 10 October 2006
  30. It Must Be Profitable Not to Receive Bribes, Wikipedia:Izvestia, April 3, 2008
  31. Девять лет лагерей
  32. Paying for a Play on Putin's Name. by Wikipedia:Francesca Mereu Wikipedia:The Moscow Times January 15, 2008. Issue 3820. Page 1.
  33. Source: 82% of Russians Approve TV Censorship, Russian Development Portal, 24 June 2005
  34. Page, Jeremy (May 16, 2005). "Analysis: punished for his political ambitions". London: The Times. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article523129.ece. Retrieved 2007-12-27. </li>
  35. How to Steal Legally. by Tim Osborne Wikipedia:The Moscow Times February 15, 2008. Issue 3843. Page 8.
  36. Putin’s Gamble. Where Russia is headed. by Wikipedia:Nikolas Gvosdev www.nationalreview.com November 05, 2003.
  37. Putin's Kremlin Asserting More Control of Economy. Yukos Case Reflects Shift on Owning Assets, Notably in Energy. by Peter Baker, Wikipedia:Washington Post July 9, 2004.
  38. Back in business - how Putin's allies are turning Russia into a corporate state. by Neil Buckley and Wikipedia:Arkady Ostrovsky Wikipedia:Financial Times June 19, 2006.
  39. What Putin Stands For. Planes, uranium, tanks, infrastructure, and nuclear power for sale. by Reuben F. Johnson Wikipedia:Weekly Standard April 23, 2007, Volume 012, Issue 30
  40. Abramovich Beyond Sibneft. by Wikipedia:Heidi Brown Wikipedia:Forbes October 12, 2005.
  41. Газнефтепром Нефтегазовая Вертикаль journal.
  42. Sibneft Deal May Just Be the Start. By Valeria Korchagina The Moscow Times September 30, 2005.
  43. $13 billion Sibneft deal fulfills Gazprom quest. By Wikipedia:Andrew Kramer Wikipedia:International Herald Tribune September 29, 2005.
  44. David Linley wooed by ‘Kremlin’s cashier’. Billionaire friend of Putin set to buy stake in viscount’s furniture business. by Wikipedia:Nick Fielding Wikipedia:The Sunday Times January 13, 2008.
  45. Planet Ark May 23, 2000 retrieved April 20, 2008 http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm?newsid=6801
  46. New York Times Nov 6, 2004 retrieved April 20, 2008
  47. </ol>