Russia: Bloggers' Memories of Soviet Maternity Hospitals

Global Voices Online
Sunday, May 31, 2009


Last December, Sinisa Boljanovic translated a number of heartrending childbirth stories, written anonymously by Serbian women and posted on the "Mother Courage" award-winning site, launched and maintained by Serbian blogger Branka Stamenkovic/Krugolina Borup.

Earlier this month, LJ user germanych, a Russian blogger, asked his readers to share their experiences of giving birth in the Soviet Union. While Branka Stamenkovic's "Mother Courage" initiative is an attempt to change the situation for the better, the Russian blogger's goal has been to document a lesser-known chapter of the Soviet history.

In the initial post, he wrote (RUS):

[...] For some reason, I have an impression that Soviet nurses [...] treated women in labor as if it was wartime and the woman was having a baby from some SS officer. That is, with some hatred mixed with squeamishness. For no apparent reason. It was a strange thing to hear about, considering that in movies they were showing the opposite: when mother and child were leaving the maternity hospital, nurses were flying around them, all so kind, all smiles.

[...]

So here is a question to the women reading this blog: would you please share your impressions of the atmosphere that surrounded you in the Soviet maternity hospitals? [...]


The feedback that LJ user germanych received from his readers prompted him to write a follow-up post (RUS), in which he quoted over 20 bloggers, some of whom shared stories that were not their own but their female relatives' (a few comments were submitted by male bloggers). Below is a sampling from this collection.

vladimirgin:

When in 1984 mama was giving birth to my brother [...] it was horror-horror, according to her. [Medical staff] only began moving somewhat when she started yelling that she was a doctor, too, and would be able to find the right person at the [municipal health department] to whom to write an adequate complaint about them. If she hadn't yelled, my brother would have been likely to be stillborn (there were labor complications).


terkat:

Post-natal hygiene devices were the hospital's non-disposable cloth napkins squeezed between legs: for some reason, it was forbidden to wear panties :(((. No pantiliners were still non-existent then. This is something that I recall with horror... My negative memories of the maternity hospital are connected with hygiene devices.


shisho4ka:

We were also in a state of complete "pantylessness" - plus the worn-out and somewhat torn hospital dresses and gowns. It wasn't allowed to bring any underwear from home, and other things were not welcome, either. Slippers were also from the hospital, I guess. Family visitation was prohibited, of course. All new fathers were roaming outside, down below, calling their wives loudly. One (free) phone for the whole floor and huge lines to use it...


madlesha:

Winter of 1984. Leningrad. The Institute of Pediatrics. Terrible attitude, everyone talks arrogantly, everyone's busy. It was very cold, minus 25 Celcius [minus 13 Fahrenheit] outside. No hot water, relatives were not allowed to pass water-boilers for us. My mother sent a box of sugar for me, all of us in the room were secretly eating it. There were 12 of us in the room. No bathtub, the toilet was [in a very bad condition]. Scary to remember it...


greenbat:

1989, [Yaroslavl]. Because of painful labor, a woman threw up. A nurse was pushing a mop to her nose, yelling: "Clean after yourself!"... 1990, St. Petersburg. A tipsy nurse overturned a crib with newborns in it, as the shocked audience watched.


bormental_r:

Our first child died because the doctors didn't show up. My wife was screaming, and they'd come up and say: "That's okay, this is your first labor, this is nothing. Be patient, don't scream!" And when they got alarmed, it was too late. He was stillborn - intrauterine asphyxia. And when my wife, exhausted from crying, finally fell asleep, listless, a nurse woke her up - the child had to be given a name, for the paperwork. A stillborn child. And they woke her up for that and demanded that she name a dead child. Even now when I recall this, everything in me turns inside out. 1975, [Sverdlovsk]...


LJ user kialu, who had her child at the age of 18, shared a similarly horrifying experience and ended her comment with these words:

[...] For ten years, my son's birthday was for me the day of nightmarish memories. Fear and horror mixed with shame. I've gotten over it now. But my son is 16 now, and I haven't had it in me to have a second child - and will never do...


LJ user germanych also posted a few memories of those who had their children delivered abroad or more recently - "for comparison":

klepak:

The conditions at maternity hospitals have changed - children are not taken away, visitations are allowed, husbands are allowed to be present during birth, there are also individual birthing rooms, and a shower in every room.

***

michellemohn:

In Germany, I had a difficulty understanding why the obstetrician was so incredibly polite, careful and nice... Turns out, they treat all pregnant women like this...


Here is LJ user germanych's conclusion to this post:

[...] Judging by additional comments, [...] nothing has changed in many of today's Russian maternity hospitals since the [Soviet times] - same rudeness, dirt and torturing of the women [...]. But there is nothing surprising about it, because in state institutions of the Russian Federation the same contemptuous treatment of human beings still survives the way it was [in the Soviet times]. Basically, maternity hospitals are the die-hard bastions of [the Soviet system]. The newly-emerged commercial maternity hospitals somewhat solve the problem with the availability of normal, safe childbirth care. In general, I think that the global reforms in Russia should begin with [reform of] maternity hospitals.


And here is another follow-up post by LJ germanych, on the impact of the previous one:

[...] The post has generated the total of about a thousand comments and has spent a few days in the [Top 30 posts at Yandex Blogs portal]. Moreover, it was the #1 post for the whole day. [...] But this is not the main thing.

The main thing is that a number of readers have labeled me a very non-objective person, who has deliberately collected all kinds of dirt and thus provoked equally dirty comments. Like, those women who had an okay experience with Soviet maternity hospitals just didn't want to write comments at such a place.

Well, to prove that I am all for the all-inclusive objectivity, I've decided to take out comments from that very first post, which talk positively about Soviet maternity hospitals and arrange them into a separate post. And I'd like to see: will it make it into the top ranking? And what kinds of comments will it get? [...]


Here are just two of these "positive" comments:

vladimirgin:

When I was being delivered, the level of care was perfect - because the midwife and the doctor were my mother's friends. [...]

***

shisho4ka:

1990. [...] Normal impressions... [...] Medical staff acted in a correct way. Without rudeness, but without special love and care, either. In general, at that time I felt that I was lucky, had been expecting worse treatment...


In a yet another follow-up post, LJ user germanych summarized the results of his "balanced approach" blogging experiment:

As expected, the post about how good Soviet maternity hospitals were neither made it into the top ranking at Yandex, nor generated even a hundred comments. For some reason, there haven't been too many people ready to support the theory that all kinds of horrors written about Soviet maternity hospitals had nothing to do with reality. [...]


LJ user germanych also quoted this "positive" comment (that has since been deleted by its author), to emphasize what the Soviet system was really about:

I, too, cannot say anything bad about Soviet maternity hospitals, since my father-in-law was [a high-ranking Communist Party official]...

Russia: Blogging for Justice in Hit-and-Run Accident Case

Global Voices Online
Friday, May 29, 2009


On May 13, 2009, a Subaru Forester car hit a pregnant woman who was crossing the street in Moscow. She died in hospital later. The perpetrator escaped the scene of the crime, but eye-witnesses remembered his license plate number. He turned out to be an off-duty police officer. On May 21, he was still not apprehended. On that day, the victim's husband, Alexey Shumm, started a blog (RUS) to draw public attention to this tragic case and to document his attempts to seek justice. Below are some excerpts.

The first post, written on May 21, 2009, has generated over a thousand comments so far:

[...] They did not save her. She died that very morning. She was my beloved wife, the only one - Lena. The mother of our daughter Nika.

She was killed by that driver, she and our second unborn baby girl...
That's it.

Now I'm looking for an answer [to the question of] who did it. I wasn't with her then, so I'm paraphrasing others.

[...] It turned out that the driver wasn't the car's owner. It appears that they've found and even interrogated him. He is a police officer from [Moscow's] Southern District. [...]

Today, on May 21, I've learned that they are again re-sending the materials [of the case] [...] to [his "native" police station], because he was off-duty.

It's been nine days already. The case hasn't been opened. He is free. All the information arrives in small drops, only after my inquiries.

I'm afraid that this [...] will go on and on. I don't want this to remain a secret. And I will do everything to find the truth and [have] a trial.

I'm ready to meet and talk, if this can be of any help.

If someone saw this accident, please write me.

[...]


May 22, 2009:

Today's news

Submitted [...] a complaint to the prosecutor general's office.

Stopped by at the investigative unit [of the Internal Affairs Department of the Southern Administrative District] [...]. [A detective there] talked about the accident - according to her, the driver got into the oncoming lane as he was passing the two cars (whose drivers were eye-witnesses) that were letting my wife cross the street. Of course, she did not expect to be hit from the opposite direction...

[...]

Thank you to all of you, people, for responses and offers of help.

I know the driver's name: he is Zhirov Roman Igorevich.

And those who write about "going to his home with a gun" - please do not write about it.


May 23, 2009:

My plans now are these:

1. Need a lawyer. Am meeting on Tuesday, as soon as I can, with the Public Verdict Fund [...], they've offered assistance. Many more have written me, and I'd like to understand how to choose the best team. [...]

2. Need all the eye-witnesses. Will be posting leaflets in the neighborhood. Got a message today that a camera from the nearby parking lot might have recorded everything.

3. Continue meeting with the mass media. Today were Echo of Moscow [radio station], [Komsomolskaya Pravda daily], RIAN [news agency]; RenTV on Monday. Lots of offers, not enough time.

4. Am getting lots of letter, trying to sort everything and respond to suggestions as much as possible. Thank you very much to you all - we are trying to stay strong.

Nika is okay, was a little sick yesterday (due to stress, I guess), today all is well already.


May 25, 2009:

News

1. At the Investigative Unit, they told me today that the case had been opened, gave me its number. Didn't tell me who is in charge, though. "You'll be summoned later."

2. The camera on the nearby store doesn't reach to that street, so there's no use in it. The guys at the store didn't see the accident itself, walked out later.


May 26, 2009:

Lena

Today is Lena's birthday...



May 28, 2009
:

Was at the prosecutor's office.

[...] they've recognized me as the victim and questioned. Now I have the right to study the materials of the case. The detective seems like a normal guy to me, and I hope this impression will not turn out to be a mistake.

Zhirov will be questioned tomorrow, it appears, and only then they'll determine restraint measures for him. For now, he is still neither a defendant, nor a suspect...

Managed to find an eye-witness. It appears that this Zhirov exceeded the speed limit, flew by the intersection on red light and drove into the opposite lane. I don't know what state one must be in to drive like this. But in the Internal Affairs Ministry's press release they are writing that he "was sober."

Russia: A Blogger's Review of "The Associate"

Global Voices Online
Thursday, May 28, 2009


About a month ago, Jost A Mon blog posted a “roundup of translated crime fiction consumed in April” - which included several books by writers from Central and Eastern Europe.

Below is a displeased Russian blogger's blitz review (RUS) of John Grisham's 21st novel, The Associate:

LJ user dolboeb/Anton Nossik - May 24, 2009

I've read Grisham's latest thriller, The Associate.

[Aleksandra Marinina, a best-selling Russian crime fiction author] also had one such detective novel, titled "An Unwilling Murderer."

The author makes up an [intricate] plot and sits down enthusiastically to write it out, twists plenty of plot lines and, closer to the middle of the narration, suddenly loses all interest in the manuscript, throws in an ellipsis in the most interesting spot, and in this form sends it off to the publisher. The publishers are probably somewhat [shocked] by such an avant-garde end, but business is business: where the reader expects a decisive battle of good against evil and the solution of all the mysteries, they hastily construct a final chapter about nothing, arrange the resulting half-a-novel in [huge] type, for [the book] to look thicker, and throw it out to the stores, where a multi-million army of the writer's fans diligently wipes the resulting half off the shelves for the price of a whole thriller.

And the funniest thing is that there is really no great difference between a thriller written to the end and one written to the middle. The goal - to grasp the reader's attention for a few hours on public transportation or at a beach - is achieved equally successfully [in both cases].

Russia: Farewell to Actor Oleg Yankovsky

Global Voices Online
Thursday, May 28, 2009


Renowned Russian actor Oleg Yankovsky died in Moscow at the age of 65 on May 20 and was buried at Novodevichy Cemetery two days later. Thousands of fans came to the Lenkom Theater to bid farewell to him. LJ user drugoi re-posted AP photos from the memorial event, and LJ user leosat wrote this (RUS) about it:

Half an hour ago, they carried the coffin out and took the body away for a requiem service. I didn't make it inside the building to say good-bye. Even those who were there by 11 AM did not make it. There were lots of people, and two hours is too little. At 1:15 PM, it was no longer possible for the people to bid farewell to their beloved [actor]. The crowd didn't grow smaller until the body was carried out. Along with others, I passed the flowers with those who were inside the cordoned-off area. There was a lively ovation, as during all the plays he had been in. Today, the applause sounded twice. The first time, when [Nikolay Karachentsov, another famous actor, who was severely injured in a 2005 car accident] came to say good-bye. I guess this was appropriate. I shed a tear when the coffin was carried out: he remains deep within us all and it's impossible to associate his image with death. Loving memory to him!


Here is one of the comments to this post - and the blogger's reply:

seaseas:

Thank you [...] for going there and for writing...

leosat:

I was there for you, too. In general, I don't go to such events often. Was at [Boris Yeltsyn's farewell ceremony] - and today...

Russia: North Ossetia's Superstitious Law Enforcement

Global Voices Online
Monday, May 25, 2009


LJ user liza-valieva - North Ossetian journalist Liza Valieva - writes (RUS) about an incident that could have prompted a lighthearted reaction had it not occurred in North Ossetia, an autonomous republic in the North Caucasus region of the Russian Federation, whose people have seen much violence since the collapse of the Soviet Union, including the Sept. 2004 Beslan school hostage crisis:

Terrorists have succeeded in achieving their goal: filling the people with fear. And in Ossetia, the record-setter in acts of terror, this isn't hard to do.

A schoolgirl's nightmare has caused panic in the law enforcement establishment. The girl said there'd be an explosion in a school on May 15. She explained that she had seen a dream in which coffins were being carried out of a school building.

As a result, "law enforcement officials have taken precautions. For the second day in a row, the school is being checked for explosives, with cynologists of North Ossetia's ministry of the interior involved in this work. The school is being guarded by the local police officers; police has been stationed at a kindergarten located near the school as well. Many parents refuse to bring their children to the kindergarten, fearing for their lives. So far, no explosives have been found inside the school." [In the original post, this paragraph contains a link to this news item (RUS) on the incident, published by Regnum news agency on May 14.]

Absurd. Would've been funny if it hadn't been so sad.

When the first blast took place in Ossetia at the central market, I was a university student. Nearly everyone in our group had the same dream then, in which the university exploded and we were trying to rescue ourselves in panic, seeing a sea of dead bodies, dismembered by the blast, and blood. But no one came to check the university building because of our dreams then. Though interior ministry officers and cynologists were indeed checking the buildings, but for a different reason: student pranksters were calling to say that the university had been mined.

People have grown so superstitious that they take dreams seriously. It's okay when people act this way, but the superstition of the law enforcement is surprising. Then again, it's good that they are reacting to the slightest of signals.


Here is one of the comments to this post - and Liza Valieva's response:

glazastikk:

You know, Liza, this isn't even funny. One can be practically 100-percent sure that they had known about the terror in Beslan in advance, and about other acts of terror as well. Terror has been and possibly remains convenient. So this alarm caused by a 15-year-old girl's dream - it's absurd. Are they trying to prove that they are on high alert? [...]

liza_valieva:

Of course, it's not funny. I was being sarcastic. The dream story is totally absurd. If our law enforcement officials are so prepared to [promptly react to the slightest threat], how come the number of acts of terror in North Ossetia isn't diminishing? For some reason, they are just totally incapable of foreseeing the real acts of terror. [...]

Russia: "A Popular Blogger"

Global Voices Online
Sunday, May 24, 2009


In the Cyrillic sector of the LiveJournal universe, the number of readers - "friends" - subscribed to a blog is one of the factors that determines its popularity (or "authority"). Bloggers who have at least a thousand "friends" are called tysyachniki (from the Russian word tysyacha, "a thousand"), and, depending on the quality of the blog's content, this is a status that is cool in some cases and dubious in others, as there are numerous ways to inflate the quantity of "friends" artificially.

LiveJournal.com and Blogs.Yandex.ru offer blog ranking services that assess, among other factors, the number of sources linking to a particular blog, as well as the number of comments generated and the number of "friends." The results often differ: LJ drugoi, for example, is the highest-ranking blogger according to both rankings, but LiveJournal ascribes 32,682 readers to this blog, while Yandex currently lists 31,834. LJ user e_grishkovets (Russian writer Evgeny Grishkovets) ranks third in the LiveJournal ranking, but is #12 on Yandex, if you look at the number of readers; if, however, you search this ranking by blog "authority," LJ user e_grishkovets comes up 106th.

Complex quantitative analysis aside, popularity means different things to different people, in blogging as in real life. Below is a very short humorous take (RUS) on some of the implications of being a "popular" blogger, posted by LJ user burtin - who has 815 friends, but, for some reason, does not show up in either of the rankings mentioned above:

- You're a popular blogger, aren't you? - asks my friend [LJ user] dochka_rosy.
- Yes, I am, - I purr in reply, pleased.
- Then ask them [readers/"friends"]: is any of them selling [Beskid] skis ["heavy-duty Soviet tourist skis for mountain skiing manufactured in Mukacheve," Ukraine]?

So here I am, asking this.

Ukraine: 65th Anniversary of the Crimean Tatar Deportations

Global Voices Online
Tuesday, May 19, 2009


May 18 marked the 65th anniversary of Sürgün, the 1944 deportations of Crimean Tatars from their homeland in Crimea.

J. Otto Pohl wrote about the history of the deportations, and here is an excerpt from his post:

On 18 May 1944, the Soviet NKVD began the systematic round up and deportation of nearly the entire Crimean Tatar population from their ancestral homeland to Uzbekistan and the Urals. Early in the morning armed troops of the NKVD started knocking on the doors of Crimean Tatar houses and informing the inhabitants that they were to be deported. The official explanation given for this mass uprooting of women, children, elderly, Red Army veterans and even members of the Communist Party was the false claim that the Crimean Tatar nationality had collectively betrayed the Soviet Union and collaborated with the Nazi occupiers. [...]

On the first day of the operation, the Soviet security organs took 90,000 people to train stations of which 48,400 began their journey eastward (Bugai, doc. 11, p. 138). The following day the number of Crimean Tatars transported to rail stations increased to 165,515 of which 136,412 had been loaded onto train echelons bound for Uzbekistan (Bugai, doc. 12, p. 138). Finally on 20 May 1944, the NKVD completed the operation. They reported loading a total of 180,014 Crimean Tatars into 67 train echelons of which 63 with 173,287 deportees were already on their way to their new destinations (Bugai, doc. 13, pp. 138-139). On the same day the NKVD also reported mobilizing 11,000 Crimean Tatar men for forced labor, bringing the total number of Crimean Tatars removed from Crimea to 191,014 (Ibid.). A total of 23,000 soldiers and officers of the internal troops of the NKVD and 9,000 operative workers of the NKVD-NKGB participated in this operation (Bugai, doc. 21, p. 144). The NKVD succeeded in ethnically cleansing Crimea of its indigenous population in a mere three days.

[...]


Maria Sonevytsky of My Simferopol Home posted photos from the memorial event that took place in Simferopol on May 18 - and described the current plight and the attitudes of the Crimean Tatar who have returned to live in Ukraine:

Over dinner in Simferopol with my adopted Crimean Tatar family last week, Ayder, a veteran of the Crimean Tatar human rights war against the USSR, used the term "genocide" to describe the present Ukrainian non-policy towards Crimean Tatars. He cited the attacks by militia groups on Crimean Tatar businesses and homes over the last twenty years, the inadequate implementation of protections for the indigenous people and the minority population, the alarmist attitude towards their Muslim minority group, framed without cause for extremism and denied land permits to build a new sobornaya mechet’, and so on. In my cautious academic way, I suggested that genocide was perhaps too strong a term: as careless and irresponsible as the Ukrainian government has been towards the Crimean Tatars, an indigenous people of Crimea, genocide implies a systematic, violent destruction of an entire ethnic group. It is more sinister than the bumbling indifference of the Ukrainian state. No, he asserted: "we are uncomprehending witnesses to a subtler form of genocide. The Crimean Tatars are being choked out of existence." [...]


Here is what Maria writes about the changes that must occur for the situation to improve:

[...] A multi-ethnic Ukraine must exist, and its ideal should not be for stalemate, a platitudinous tolerance; Ukraine must seek a deep acceptance and respect for its diverse minority and indigenous groups. A propos to the Crimean Tatar situation, the Ukrainian government should finally approve a law to grant the indigenous people of the Crimean peninsula rights and protections as a threatened, indigenous people of their ancestral homeland: land rights, education in the native language, an end to religious discrimination, and ultimately, a right to self-determination within the territory of Ukraine.

We can learn from a [Hutsul] musician who I spoke to a few weeks ago, during the Easter holidays. We sat in his ancient Volga as he played me old cassette tapes and told me his deportation story. His family had been deported to Siberia during the war and not allowed to resettle in the [Ivano-Frankivsk] oblast until the 1970s. Reading about the Crimean Tatar non-violent resistance of the 20th century, their fierce support of the [Orange revolution in 2004], and their annual celebration of [Taras Shevchenko]'s birthday, he asked me for a recording of a Crimean Tatar violinist from whom he could learn some traditional melodies. I asked him why, and he said, "to show my respect, as they’ve been showing it to us." In place of fear, respect. In place of dim hostility, a desire to understand. In place of ignorance, education. [...]

Central & Eastern Europe: Swine Flu (aka “California 0409”)

Global Voices Online
Friday, May 8, 2009


Below are some of the Central and Eastern Europe bloggers' reactions to news reports on swine flu and measures taken by some of the governments to keep the disease from spreading to their countries.

Blogging Balkanistan and other Eccentricities turns to history and posts an excerpt from an eyewitness account of the Thessaloniki plague epidemic of 1724, written by Pylyp Orlyk, a Cossack hetman, and highlighted in Mark Mazover's non-fiction book, Salonica, City of Ghosts. The blogger ends the post with this note:

[...] As for the current pandemic several Balkan countries have imposed a ban on pork imports from the US or Mexico, while reviewing their emergency response.


And here's one exchange from the comments section:

Daniel:

Guys, cancel your Mexico vacations, and insted of ordering pork – try eating a roasted goat. It’s awesome.

bloggingbalkanistan:

What does goat taste like?


Croatian Crescent writes this about the coverage of Croatia's one suspected swine flu case:

A 22 year old girl who returned from Chicago to Osijek, in the far East of Croatia, was suspected of having swine flu. In a special press conference, Health minister Darko Milinović told the girl was being kept in isolation and monitored. Večernji list put a picture of the girl online, with a bar over her eyes as if she is some kind of criminal.

A day later we know that the girl is not infected with swine flu. Actually, she doesn't even have "normal" flu. She recovered from swine flu in a day, but I wonder how much time she needs to recover from the stigma. [...]


Sleeping With Pengovsky writes this about the fear of swine flu - and xenophobia:

[...] However, the rise of Fascism today is connected to one other phenomenon. The Culture of Fear.

Did you notice that all of the sudden economic crisis is no longer top issue? Turn to any news channel and you’ll see a 24/7 live reporting on swine flu. The fact that so far it killed less people than your average flu does every year is not important. What is important is what it could do. The fact that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction was not important. What was important was that it could have had them. It is also very important that certain corporations make a lot of money in such cases. [...]


Ari Rusilla of BalkanPerspective/Blogactiv.eu writes about the possible effect of the swine flu media hype on the June 2009 European Parliament election:

[...] Swine flu has been in headlines nearly two weeks. The media hype is not in any scale to the real thread, it can be good entertainment like circus in ancient Rome and a tool to put the common people’s focus on trivialities. For example if European Parliament elections have attracted quite a few people so far there is now good change that the whole election will be passed unnoticed due the swine flu panic. [...]


Ukraine Today writes that the Ukrainian president should stay away from focusing on the domestic politics aspect of the swine flu emergency:

[...] The epidemic crisis was not helped by a President seeking to place all blame and responsibility on his political enemies whilst hand balling any responsibility, which is what Viktor Yuschenko had done. Maybe Yushchenko would be better off placing his energy in getting Ukrainian authorities to start cleaning up the Country as a visit to Ukraine is at times like visiting a garbage dump (literally). [...]


The Czech Daily Word writes about travel to the Czech Republic and "a sad paradox" that the swine flu emergency has created:

[...] During the times of unilateral USA-Czech visa regime many politicians, tourists and journalists (including myself) used to mention the fact that the system had been humiliating (”we have to, they don’t“).

And now every American who arrives in the Czech Republic is screened. “Luckily” we do not have regular Mexico-Prague flights, so passengers traveling from Mexico have to change flights in Madrid where some precautions have been in place as well… [...]


Both The Czech Daily Word and Czechmatediary write about the warning issued by the Czech health minister; here's a quote from a Czechmatediary's post:

[...] For now the Czechs have enough of the anti-viral medicine for about 2.2 million people which is sufficient for about 20% of the Czech population. The Minister of Health, Daniela Filipova, warned citizens not to buy out all of the protective masks as well as the Tamiflu medicine which, if overused, can cause a resistance of the virus to the other otherwise helpful antiviral agents. [...]


Lituanica writes about something of a swine flu-related pharmaceutical emergency in Lithuania:

As the Lietuvos Rytas daily writes stocks of anti-viral drugs costing more than 100 litas (EUR 29) have been swept out of Vilnius pharmacies, although the medication is only sold on prescription. Pharmaceutical companies believe this is due to the threat of swine influenza pandemic. [...]


Streetwise Professor writes about the Russian authorities' decision to send "all passengers arriving in Russia from the United States or Mexico" through "contact-free heat sensor" to test their temperatures:

[...] Whew. Glad there’s a “contact free” test. When I read the first paragraph, I had a vision of a Russian Nurse Ratched standing at the end of the jetway in Sheremetyevo with a thermometer, and NOT one of those nice little electronic oral ones, if you know what I mean.

Uhm, I mean a temperature may be a necessary condition for swine flu, but it’s hardly a sufficient condition. My 15 year old had a fever last week. Pretty sure it wasn’t the swine flu. Talk about a test tailor-made for false positives. In other words, a complete waste of resources with virtually no prospect of any benefit. Unless the whole idea is to discourage foreign tourists, and to deter Russians from traveling abroad. [...]


Streetwise Professor also writes about import restrictions on "uncooked pork from Mexico, California, Texas and Kansas" imposed by the Russian authorities:

[...] Russia has routinely used health justifications to ban imports of agricultural products that compete with domestic producers. This just seems another transparently opportunistic attempt to exploit health fears to engage in protectionism. [...]


In the comments section to this post, some of the readers compare Russia's response to the measures taken in other countries.

Leopolis writes that "Russia's WTO accession my be first casualty" of swine flu:

[...] Over the past year, Russia has failed to 'relist' 34 US pork processing, production and storage facilities - effectively rendering around half of all US pork production ineligible for export to Russia. On April 8, the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) called on the Obama administration to decelerate Russia’s WTO accession until it began to “play by the rules and stop its blatant actions to restrict US pork.”

Until this week, Russia has not been able to identify any health or sanitary reasons for blocking US meat imports - the requirement for justifying the block as per its 2006 bilateral WTO obligations. The ineptly named swine flu now presents a reason for Russia to approve US meat facilities on a plant-by-plant basis - actions inconsistent with the WTO’s Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) Agreement requiring WTO signatories to recognize equally standards in other countries. [...]


Sean's Russia Blog reports on the alleged discovery of the first two swine flu cases in Russia - both in passengers who arrived from New York City - and writes about other geopolitical dimensions of the emergency:

[...] Interestingly, in Russia doctors call the virus, which has damned the good name of the pig the world over, “California 0409.” That should make pigs feel better, but what of the sensitivities of us Californians?

[...]

Mexico as epicenter has of course inspired our American xenophobes into a fury of anti-immigrant hate. Fox News has predictably led the anti-immigrant charge with accusations that illness is part of some kind of viral conspiracy against America. It is only a matter of time they follow the Israelis in adopting “Mexican flu.” [...]

Russia: Teen Curfew; Police Officer's Shooting Spree

Global Voices Online
Thursday, April 30, 2009


On April 20, it was announced that President Dmitry Medvedev approved the changes to children's rights law, allowing regional authorities to bar minors under the age of 18, unaccompanied by parents or legal guardians, from public places - "for example, in the street, stadiums, parks, squares, public transport and Internet cafes" - from 10 PM to 6 AM. Below is one of the reactions (RUS) from the Russian blogosphere, by LJ user oleg_kozyrev:

Medvedev and the children

The president sincerely believes that the day after the 18th birthday is the first day when a young person can venture outside after 10 PM.

That is, tomorrow is already time for him to be drafted into the army, to defend the country, to be trusted with tanks and rockets, but a week before that, he was not yet trusted with stepping beyond the threshold of his house after 10 PM. And this concerns all children - those from the villages, and those on vacation, and students, and those who attend music schools and chess classes, and those who are out in the field trip to make a fire and bake potatoes, and those who are into astronomy and are outdoors with a neighbor friend and with a telescope, observing the stars - all of them.

It's actually an incredible joke. IN THE TIME OF PEACE, THEY'VE INTRODUCED CURFEW FOR ALL RUSSIA'S YOUNG PEOPLE.

High crime rates? Fire [minister of the interior Rashid Nurgaliyev]. What do the young people have to do with it?

IF THE PRESIDENT CAN'T SECURE ORDER IN THE STREETS AND INTRODUCES CURFEW AS A SOLUTION - IT'S WORTH FOR SUCH A PRESIDENT TO CONSIDER A DIFFERENT JOB

[...]


Below are some of the comments to this post:

georg_pik:

A person can get access to classified information at the age of 17 (many students need to have such access by the first year of their studies). It means that a first-year student with access to documents that constitute state secret do not have the right to go out into the street after 10 PM.

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phillennium

And what if it's a first-year student at the evening department, where the last class may end, for example, at 9:50 PM.

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oleg_kozyrev:

I don't know what world the politicians who adopted this law are living in. Must be some unreal world, in which young people don't work, don't study - don't live.

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komsomolka_new

Maybe they'd prefer to do without young people at all. Retired people are more active at voting. And they usually ask the election commission at the polling station who to vote for.

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Anonymous:

There is one thing - the most important one - missing from this law: the way it is in civilized Europe - all food stores (especially including those that sell alcohol) work till 3 PM on Saturdays and are closed on Sundays!!! [This should be introduced] all over Russia!!

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lev_evgenevi4:

All is okay - this is just another law that is not going to be observed until a cop suddenly wants some money.


At least three of LJ user oleg_kozyrev's readers mention Denis Yevsyukov, a Moscow police officer who shot three people to death and wounded six in a supermarket on April 20, the day he turned 32:

m_holodkowski:

That's right! Who needs to take walks at night when there are Yevsyukovs with bandit guns all around! ;)

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miecz_kaina:

This is a preventive measure, to keep the police from shooting those who haven't reached the age of 18 after 10 PM.

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alrihard:

Kids provoke Yevsyukovs. A drunk cop would enter a supermarket in the evening/at night to buy vodka, his wife [...] hasn't given it to him yet, and here are all those happy young boys and girls...


Following Major Yevsyukov's shooting spree, president Medvedev sacked Colonel-General Vladimir Pronin, Moscow’s police chief since 2001.