By Tai Adelaja
Russia Profile, 05/14/2012Despite the government's best efforts, Russian logistics services continue to be slow, bureaucratic and unpredictable, a new World Bank report has found. The quality of Russia's trade and transport related infrastructure is subpar even when compared to infrastructural facilities in other former Soviet states, according to the bank's Logistics Performance Index report published on Friday. Russia not only received declining scores in the survey's “ease of arranging competitively priced shipments to international markets” category, but also ranks low in the ability to track and trace such consignments or confirm whether shipments reach their destination.![]()
Editorial Comment by Russia Profile Staff
05/11/2012Russia Profile brings you some of the best analysis on top stories in Russia today. But there’s always more behind them. Each Friday, our writers provide their own take on the news, offering unique commentary to put events into a different perspective. This week, Dan Peleschuk probes the Russian opposition's changing tactics, and Tai Adelaja explains the Russian government's strategy to contain the Eurozone crisis.![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile, 05/11/2012Now that Dmitry Medvedev has handed over power to his friend Vladimir Putin and has taken his place at the helm of the Russian government as prime minister, it’s time to take stock of his one-term presidency and his historic legacy. Will he go down in history as a great visionary, or a weak and pretentious leader who provided liberal political cover to perpetuate the personal-cult regime of Vladimir Putin? Has Medvedev been a genuine modernizer or was he simply faking modernization to let the steam out? Was he ever president?![]()
By Tai Adelaja
Russia Profile, 05/10/2012While Russia's newly inaugurated President Vladimir Putin may be facing a myriad of complex issues, ranging from the brain drain to unfavorable demographics, he has, for the time being, zeroed in on fixing the country's broken immigration policy. In one of his sweeping executive orders issued on Monday, Putin said federal and regional authorities must introduce mandatory testing for migrant workers in subjects like the Russian language, Russian history and the basics of Russian legislation. Highly qualified foreign workers will be exempt from the tests, which Putin said must take off by November 2012 at the latest. Putin also instructed the Russian government to prepare draft laws that will toughen punishments for violating Russia’s immigration laws and submit them before December 2012.![]()
By Tai Adelaja
Russia Profile, 05/08/2012Hours after he took the oath of office on Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a raft of decrees sure to set him apart from his predecessor and project his image as an active, energetic and business-like leader. Putin, who has promised to continue the modernization and business-friendly policies of former President Dmitry Medvedev, spent the rest of his inauguration day approving an unwieldy list of economic and social policies. Part of the measures decreed by the once-again president would improve the country’s business climate, while others, like wage increases, could punch holes in the budget, analysts say.![]()
By Andrew Roth
Russia Profile, 05/08/2012In the span of one day, Moscow went from the brutality of violent, massive street clashes between young, mostly male protesters and riot police to the pomp and circumstance of Vladimir Putin’s inauguration, held in the gilded Kremlin State Palace.![]()
Vladimir Putin was sworn in as Russian president on Monday in a glittering Kremlin ceremony that took place less than 24 hours after protesters opposed to his rule had battled police in downtown Moscow.
“I swear on the power invested in me as president of the Russian Federation to respect and protect the rights and freedom of its citizens,” Putin said, his right hand placed on a red-bound copy of the Russian Constitution.
Russia’s nuclear suitcase was handed over to Putin immediately after his inauguration.![]()
Dmitry Medvedev has outlined the future government\s action program at the State Duma
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RIA Novosti
05/04/2012Osama bin Laden’s death had little immediate impact on Russia’s own Islamist insurgency, which had occasional ties with al-Qaida, but a lot remains at stake for Moscow in Afghanistan, where a weakened al-Qaida is being sidelined by the Taliban, Russian foreign policy analysts said. “Russia stands a chance of filling the upcoming political vacuum in the country,” said Viktor Korgun, the head of Afghan studies department at the Moscow-based Institute of Oriental Studies.![]()
By Andrew Roth
Russia Profile
05/02/2012Europe’s frustration with Ukraine’s jailing of the former prime minister is once again spilling over into a diplomatic row. Over the last week a series of European states have begged out of an important Yalta summit set for late May, and talks of a political boycott of the Euro 2012 championships, which are co-hosted by Ukraine this year, have the Ukrainians talking of Europe reviving “Cold War tactics.” Yet Europe’s bag of tricks to punish Ukraine is running low, and for now the Ukrainian government seems to value keeping Yulia Tymoshenko in prison above mollifying Europe.![]()
By Andrew Roth
Russia Profile
04/26/2012Today yet another faction of Syria’s divided opposition met in Moscow with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and pledged its support for UN Secretary General Kofi Annan’s plan to bring peace to Syria. But even as support consolidates behind the Annan plan, infighting has continued within the self-proclaimed opposition groups, dashing hopes of a united opposition. Moscow has responded by saying that it is focusing on the very basics – no foreign intervention – to end a conflict that has killed more than 9,000 people in the last year.![]()
Comment by Sergey Markedonov
Special to Russia Profile
04/18/2012A parliamentary election campaign kicked off in Armenia on April 8. The vote is scheduled for May 6, with 131 members of Parliament to be elected to the republic’s National Assembly (90 on party lists and 41 in single-member constituencies). But political passions already ran high even before the race officially started. The political heavyweights are bracing for a fierce battle.![]()
Russia Profile
04/17/2012Several months after his election to the presidency of Moldova’s unrecognized breakaway state of Transdnestr, Yevgeny Shevchuk is beginning to settle into the position. Hailed by many as the new reform-minded leader bent on opening up the previously closed neo-Soviet regime, Shevchuk has come out swinging, visiting Moscow and pledging greater cooperation with Moldova. But Russia’s own overtures, especially on the eve of Vladimir Putin’s return to the presidency, may leave Shevchuk with little room to maneuver.![]()
Russia Profile
04/16/2012The recent murder of a prominent Muslim activist has sent ripples of fear throughout Moscow’s Muslim community, offering a reminder that Russia remains plagued by ethnically motivated killings. Yet the slaying reveals several, perhaps borderline optimistic, forecasts for minority life in Moscow. Observers point to the marked decrease in hate crime, a result of better police work, and the outpouring of public grief, matched by the authorities’ sympathy, as signs that ethnic tensions in Russia may be less grim than they often seem.![]()
Comment by Sergey Markedonov
Special to Russia Profile
04/12/2012The second round of the presidential election wrapped up in South Ossetia on April 8, with Leonid Tibilov, a former KGB boss, winning 56.12 percent of the vote. But the electoral math means little without the political context of the campaign. Has South Ossetia overcome the political crisis that started last November? What lessons has Moscow learned? What are the intentions of the new leader of this partially recognized republic?![]()
By Samuel Vary
Special to Russia Profile
04/11/2012A groundbreaking visa agreement between the United States and Russia will likely be stuck for months in the Russian State Duma, where it awaits parliamentary ratification as required by Russian law. Despite the fact that the document was signed in November of 2011, a senior United Russia deputy claims that the visa question would not receive any attention in the coming year, and will be reviewed no earlier than the election of the new (or second-term) American president this November.![]()
By Andrew Roth
Russia Profile
04/10/2012Viktor Bout, the Russian businessman and convicted arms dealer whose story has spawned Hollywood spinoffs, was sentenced in downtown Manhattan on Friday afternoon to 25 years behind bars. Bout got off with the minimum sentence despite calls from prosecutors to sentence him to life in prison for conspiring to kill U.S. nationals through his arms sales. Nonetheless, Bout’s sentence was met with fiery words in Moscow, where Russia’s Foreign Ministry released a statement calling the trial “ungrounded” and “biased,” while Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he would fight to extradite Bout back to Russia.![]()
© Russia Profile, 2011