Showing posts with label [mrparker]. Show all posts
Showing posts with label [mrparker]. Show all posts

Russia: Two Video Scandals

Global Voices Online
Saturday, March 27, 2010


In Russia this week it has been hard to miss the two scandals that, at first, appear to have only one thing in common: both are centered around amateur videos published online. What they also share is, perhaps, the feeling of incredulity and disgust that the viewers are left with upon watching the videos, and, in many cases, the outrage.

One scandal involves opposition activist Ilya Yashin (LJ user yashin), political analyst Dmitry Oreshkin, and the Russian Newsweek's editor-in-chief Mikhail Fishman (LJ user mfishman): footage made with a hidden camera shows them allegedly attempting to bribe Moscow traffic police officers, and there is also a video of naked Fishman sitting next to a woman and sniffing white powder off a table. (For a succinct yet comprehensive English-language account of this video scandal, please see the March 23 text by author Michael Idov, published at The Daily Beast: Russia's Amazing Drugs and Hookers Scandal.)

The other scandal takes place in Irkutsk region, where high school students in the town of Shelekhov repeatedly beat up their 73-year-old female PE teacher and then posted the videos of these sparring matches on the web; the teacher reportedly had no memory of the beatings. (A short English-language Sky News item on this, with a video sampling, is here.)

Heated discussions that these two scandals have generated in the blogosphere and in other online venues are taking place on quite different orbits - which nevertheless do have one or two overlap points.

Below are some of the reactions (RUS) to a news item about the PE teacher incident, posted by users of Zavuch.info, a Russian teachers' portal and social network:

Persikotik:

[...] I think the school's administration had to take some urgent steps to avoid a situation like this at the school - instead of being embarrassed to "wash dirty laundry in public." And it is scary that such a video spent a few months on the web, as a tutorial for morons.

***

ann_dro_id:

If we don't stand up for one another, if we don't hold protest rallies, if we don't stand up for our right to defend our honor and dignity, they'll keep on pushing us around! Even drivers don't let themselves be mistreated [e.g., Vladivostok drivers' protest in Dec. 2008]. These are the times when a being a teacher is turning into one of the most dangerous professions. [...]

***

Gritsun Dmitry:

[...] where is it all going if a school employs a teacher who keeps being beaten but doesn't remember anything about it. I'm not saying that the age of 73 is a diagnosis, but memory loss does seem like a pathology. I'm not going to justify the students. Horrible!!!!

Nemiro Lyudmila:

[...] and what if there is no other PE teacher at the school? What then? Who is going to work on this job for such [a miserly pay]? Your suggestions???? Our school hasn't had new teachers right out of college in a million years. Not a single one. They work for a year and [then leave]. And we are SOCHI, no less!!! [Sochi is a Russian city on the Black Sea coast, which, among other things, is preparing to host the 2014 Winter Olympics.]

***

Viking

[...] We should keep up with the progress! Nothing scary is taking place. The young followers of the [Nashi and Walking Together pro-regime youth movements] are practicing techniques of fighting against pensioners' rallies in the future, following instructions from the [ruling United Russia party]. [In Oct. 2009, Russian riot police used - during a drill - “water cannons, shock grenades, and tear gas” to disperse “a group of senior citizens that protested social injustice and blocked a federal highway.”]

***

Biokhimik:

[...] We should keep this situation under CONTROL. Where are the trade unions, where are the human rights activists? (I haven't just cursed, have I?) [...]

And here is a selection of posts on the Yashin/Oreshkin/Fishman affair.

Opposition activist Marina Litvinovich - LJ user abstract2001:

The day before yesterday, a user with an eloquent nickname kanal911 registered an account on YouTube - in order to post this video:



In this video, Oreshkin, Yashin and Fishman are trying to bribe [traffic police officers].

In my opinion, the footage is real, was done by [traffic police officers] themselves. The only question is - are they videotaping everyone like this or just some, those who have been "pointed out" to them? [...]

It is clear that due to the public movement against the police and [traffic police] these service have now gone on the offensive. And it's clear that the easiest way to fight the "oppositionists" is to catch them giving bribes themselves.

This, my friends, is exactly why whenever I write about the lawlessness of the cops and [traffic cops], I do this with clear conscience. And I've emphasized this multiple times - I do not just criticize those who give bribes, I call on you not to give bribes and I myself do not give bribes. I'll be honest - I stopped bribing [traffic police officers] after my trip to Beslan [a town in North Ossetia where the 2004 school hostage crisis took place], when I learned that the terrorists paid a bribe to pass one of the [traffic police] checkpoints. [...]

Mikhail Fishman, editor-in-chief of the Russian Newsweek - LJ user mfishman:

[...] A special operation has been carried out against me. It has been thoroughly planned. It was based on provocations, deceit, editing and long-term shadowing, and law enforcement officials participated in it. Who exactly and on what grounds is a separate question. It was carried out a long time ago, and now it has turned into a campaign.

Those who organized this campaign have succeeded in some things. Namely, they've poured a dirty puddle around me - and around themselves: they've dragged many decent people into a mean and petty discussion of someone else's private life. In the language of political technologies this is called the lowering of the discussion level.

This is a result, but not the one that they were counting on. The point of it was different: to force me to alter the editorial direction of the magazine that I'm in charge of. [...] This is a signal to all journalists: sit quietly.

I'm responding on behalf of our team: no, we will continue working the way we did before. Topics, stories, the principles and standards of our work will remain unchanged. [...]

Olga Allenova, special correspondent for the Kommersant daily - LJ user allenova:

[...] And the most disgusting thing is that Fishman has nothing to respond to this with? File a lawsuit? Against whom? A statement has to be submitted to the prosecutor's office, of course. [...] No one has canceled the right to private life in this country yet. [...] And THIS can happen to any human rights activist, journalist, politician, even regardless of whether it's him or not featured in this footage. This can be done to anyone who, for some reason, displeases [a top aide to the Russian president and PM Vladislav Yuriyevich Surkov], for example. You are responsible for this, Vladislav Yuriyevich, aren't you? Or, to be more precise, your Young Guardists [members of the Young Guard of United Russia, the youth wing of the ruling United Russia party]? [...] Who is the next one on your list? And aren't you afraid that eventually you'll find yourself on it, too?

Political activist Aleksey Navalny - LJ user navalny:

[...] Seriously though, I think that Yashin, Fishman [...] should not leave it as it is. Instead, they should start a decisive campaign against those who ordered this crap. Because it's a total mess. Next thing you know, they'll install hidden cameras inside apartments.

I think a campaign for the European and U.S. entry visa ban for Surkov [and his associates] looks rather realistic. [...]

[Sochi. Sukhumi. Skolkovo.] There many good places for recreation outside the EU.

It may work out, if we approach it seriously and don't drop it halfway, as is usually done by our human rights activists and liberal politicians.

The Young Guard has denied its involvement in the scandal, however:

[...] Finally, once more, for the idiots, in big and fat letters: "THE YOUNG GUARD DID NOT ORDER OR AUTHOR THE VIDEO ABOUT FISHMAN. WE DECISIVELY CONDEMN SUCH METHODS OF POLITICAL STRUGGLE. [...]

Maxim Kononenko - LJ user mrparker:

[...] I'd also like to support Fishman. A [KGB] provocation against Yashin and Oreshkin - that's normal. Yashin is a politician. Oreshkin is a grant-eater and traitor. These people are screwing my state, and the state is screwing them in return. That's a genuine and mutual hatred.

But Misha Fishman is the creator of meanings. A very good one. And to fight such opponents is possible only using the same methods that these opponents are using - i.e., with meanings. A meaning vs a meaning. A text vs a text.

But definitely not whores with cocaine vs a text and a meaning. A meaning isn't equal to cocaine, and a text isn't equal to a whore.

But an image isn't equal to a meaning and a text, either. This is why I suggest that everyone who supports Fishman (and I hope that this would be every normal journalist, author or media professional) records [his/her] own video with white powder and post it on YouTube.

[...]

LJ user ma79 is one of the Russian bloggers who has responded to LJ user mrparker's call and posted a video of himself and "white powder":



[...]

I wanted to wash my hair before shooting this video, but then decided it wouldn't be authentic that way.

Russia: On Xenophobia, Again

Global Voices Online
Thursday, March 1, 2007


Here's the translation of one of today's top-rated posts at the Yandex Blogs portal, written by LJ user nl, one of the most popular Russian bloggers:

The degree of xenophobia in our wonderful land tends to remain underestimated right until you collide with its fruit and feel the shame for it with your own skin.

[My wife] is looking for a babysitter for [our baby daughter Maria]. She gets in touch with yet another potential babysitter and gives her the details in brief: the child's age, what kind of work, the amount of it...

Do you know what the first question of the potential babysitter is?

She asks:

- Tell me, have they informed you that I am not Russian?

[LJ user kmaka, nl's wife] says this question put her in a state resembling shock.

An elderly [ethnic] Armenian [originally from Azerbaijan's capital Baku]. A philologist. "I haven't lived in Moscow for a long time - 17 years or so."

Me, I had just returned home from the latest [political debates] held at Bilingua (where I had the pleasure to observe a group of young people who were yelling [Sieg Heil] for about 20 minutes), and I tried to explain to [kmaka] that there's nothing whatsoever to be shocked about here, and moreover, this is how it's been for a long time.


So far, there are 638 comments to this post.

***

The debate nl is referring to was between Yulia Latynina, a Russian journalist and writer, and Maxim Kononenko, best known for his satirical vignettes on Vladimir Putin (Vladimir Vladimirovich™); the debate's topic was "Where are the democrats?"

At least two of the neo-Nazi guys who interrupted the event are also bloggers, and their posts describing the fun they had that night are - just like nl's post - in the top 30 at Yandex Blogs today.

I choose not to translate anything from their posts, except for Yulia Latynina's retort, which both of them quote, in two slightly different ways:

tesak-f18:

"If such creatures - I can't call him a man - keep killing Tajik girls and get drunk on beer, this isn't going to help Russia in any way."

***

rusns:

Latynina replied: "Here's how brave they all are. They must be the same guys who, in group of 20, are capable of nothing but killing one Tajik girl."


The Tajik girl Latynina was referring to is the 9-year-old Hurshida Sultanova, who was stabbed to death by a group of neo-Nazis on Feb. 9, 2004, in the heart of St. Petersburg.

***

On a different note, unrelated to xenophobia, Lyndon of Scraps of Moscow has recently translated into English four of Maxim Kononenko's Vladimir Vladimirovich™ pieces - here and here.

Last month, Kononenko switched his LJ identity from mrparker to maxim-kononenko, deleting his highly popular blog (which, surprisingly, is still rated #5 at Yandex Blogs). Gone with the old blog is Kononenko's cruel remark about the Beslan mothers who lost their children in the school siege of 2004, the post dating back to September 2005, around the first anniversary of the tragedy. Though now erased, it features in many Russian blogs whose authors were outraged at the time; also, there's a mention of Kononenko's remark in the article by Yuri Saprykin in the Bolshoi Gorod magazine - whose translation Lyndon of Scraps of Moscow has recently posted as well:

In spite of its apparent democratic spirit, ZheZhe [LiveJournal] is more and more structured along the lines of TV: there are the ratings leaders, hooked on the feeling of their own importance, and an amorphous mass following their every move. The leaders set the key items on the news agenda (see the Ivannikova case, the story about the NBP members getting beaten up, or the one about Minkin and Latynina getting pelted with tomatoes), and the masses approve (or disapprove) with a discordant rumble. And as for the idiocies of the rating leaders, well even the [Russian TV stars] Malakhovs and the Solov’yovs of the world couldn’t dream of them. Just consider the (already paradigmatic) phrase about how “the mothers of Beslan should just have more children.”

Russia: LJ and Politics

Global Voices Online
Saturday, October 28, 2006


On October 25, International Herald Tribune published Evgeny Morozov's opinion piece on the recent developments in the Russian blogosphere. On his blog - Sharp & Sound: Perspectives On Modern Politics - Morozov wrote:

[...] I’ve been surprised how little coverage the story has received in the Western media…Hm, virtually none…


Russian bloggers, unlike the world media, have been all over the controversial Six Apart-Sup deal in the past few weeks - and some, including Maxim Kononenko (LJ user mrparker, creator of Vladimir Vladimirovich™ spoofs on Vladimir Putin), have also been monitoring what little is being written outside Russia. Never too congenial, Kononenko passed an extremely harsh judgment (RUS) on Morozov's piece - and Morozov provided a translation:

I’m honoured: Mr Parker, one of the most odious figures on the Russian blogosphere, has just awarded with “prize of the month” for “the most clinical idiotism, which can only be reached in analytic journalism”.

Coming from him, it’s equivalent to Nobel Prize in literature… ;-)

I’m anxious to see other prizes from the Russian bloggers.

[...]


What unnerved Kononenko was Morozov's assertion that Anton Nossik - LJ user dolboeb, "a former associate of Gleb Pavlovsky, the Kremlin's spindoctor" and the "chief blogging officer" of the company taking over LJ's Cyrillic sector - may be aiding the Kremlin "in destroying a viable and vibrant public forum."

But Nossik is not alone in the Russian blogosphere when it comes to having ties to one of Putin's chief image-shapers: Kononenko co-hosts a political TV show with him, and there are also Marina Litvinovich (LJ user abstract2001) and Marat Guelman (LJ user galerist), who were both closely linked to the Kremlin and Pavlovsky in the past - and are in opposition now, to various degrees.

Guelman - a gallery owner, among other things - founded the Foundation for Effective Politics think tank together with Pavlovsky in 1995 (and Pavlovsky is still its president). Litvinovich - founder of PravdaBeslana.ru, among other things - served as the head of the Foundation's Internet department (Pavlovsky doesn't seem to have a blog).

Guelman has been having an eventful time lately. First, on Oct. 20, Russian customs officials at Sheremetyevo-2 airport seized 11 photo collages by Blue Noses that were being transported from the Guelman Gallery in Moscow to Matthew Bown's gallery in London. On his blog, Guelman posted reproductions of two collages created five years ago and depicting Vladimir Putin, George W. Bush and Osama bin Laden lounging together in underwear (here and here). He also wrote (RUS) that the authorities were threatening to persecute him for offending the Russian president, and noted that some media, both local and international, were using his blog to gather information:

[...] Others called me and Matthew, but one way or another, 13 publications[,] two radio stations and [R]euters - [their] source was LJ. Who needs press conferences ;))


The following day, on Oct. 21, a group of men described as skinheads burst into Guelman's gallery, destroying paintings by an ethnic Georgian artist Aleksandr Dzhikia and beating Guelman up. In his journal, he later posted a brief note (RUS), which received 287 comments, most of them "get well" wishes:

;alive and in one piece)


LJ user mnog posted photos of the gallery after the pogrom (150 comments, RUS).

Litvinovich, like Guelman, had been attacked and badly beaten earlier this year; like Guelman, she posted a brief update on her blog shortly after the incident took place in March and received some 500 "get well" comments from her readers.

Lyndon of Scraps of Moscow was following the story at the time and, among other things, he provided some background information on Litvinovich and her involvement with Gleb Pavlovsky:

Perhaps the powers-that-be are even more angry at Litvinovich because, years before her recent attempt to get possible Putin successor Sergei Ivanov booted from his job as Defense Minister, she seemed to be on their side. Without wanting to call her opposition cred into question, it seems relevant to mention that she got her start working for Kremlin spin-doctor Gleb Pavlovsky's Fond Effektivnoi Politiki, though, to be fair, I think back in '99 Pavlovsky wasn't considered to have gone over to the dark side - actually, back in '99, concern about the Putin administration becoming a "dark side" was rather muted overall.


Recently, Litvinovich has posted photos from her visit to Chechnya soon after the beating - here, here and here: ruins again and again, ads calling people to "come out of the shade" and pay taxes, Ahmad Kadyrov's monument in Grozny - "The only monument I know of a man with prayer beads." On several photos, one can still see scars on Litvinovich's face.

Also recently, Litvinovich posted photos from her visit to the Korallovo children’s home and lyceum, founded by Mikhail Khodorkovsky. She wrote (RUS):

Have been to the birthday party of the Podmoskovny Lyceum in Korallovo. As you know, orphans live and study there. Including many children from [Beslan], orphans of [Nord-Ost], the fallen planes, children of the border guards, etc.

The lyceum is still under arrest. Nevertheless, they exist and continue to develop. Few people know, but the lyceum's motto is "Duty. Honor. Fatherland." They say it as part of the lyceum student's oath, too.

Last I was there was three years ago, with Mikhail Borisovich [Khodorkovsky], a week before his arrest. Today, only [Khodorkovsky's mother] Marina Filippovna was there. [Khodorkovsky's fahter] Boris Moiseyevich was in the hospital.

The children performed a wonderful concert. If you are interested, you can see the photos I took (part 1 and part 2).

God willing, all should be good for them and the lyceum.