Daily Archives: June 1, 2006

Is David Johnson Worse than a Russian Skinhead?


Everyone considered him the coward of the county.
He’d never stood one single time to prove the county wrong.
His mama named him Tommy, the folks just called him yellow,
But something always told me they were reading Tommy wrong.

– Kenny Rogers
“The Coward of the County”

Who’s more dangerous to Russia’s future, its skinheads or David Johnson and other “moderates” like him?

La Russophobe‘s money is on David and the “moderates.” Is she reading Tommy wrong? Time will tell.

La Russophobe can just hear you now, gentle reader: How can La Russophobe be so “cruel” and “extreme”? Isn’t it clear that Johnson’s heart is in the right place, even if it isn’t big enough?

Allow La Russophobe to explain. She has already quoted Martin Luther King’s famous Letter from Birmingham Jail once, but it cannot be quoted too often. King wrote:

I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disapointed by the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that that Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride towards freedom is not the White Citizens Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: ‘I agree with the goals you seek but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom. Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.

David Johnson is perhaps just such a “white moderate,” someone “who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice.” Granted that Johnson’s influence over what Russia does is marginal at best, but whatever it is worth it does not seem he will not use it to create direct opposition to the Kremlin’s neo-Soviet polices, and that makes him more dangerous to Russia’s future, as King and La Russophobe see it, than Putin himself. Johnson’s Russia List is distinguished by its marked lack of confrontation with the evil regime that occupies the Kremlin, its marked paternalistic belief that “he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom.” When the dust clears, and Russia emerges as “Zaire with Permafrost,” so-called moderates like Johnson will be seen as larger culprits than aggressive criminals like Putin. Johnson’s “lukewarm acceptance” of the struggle against racism in Russia provides a salient example.

OK, so you don’t believe La Russophobe. You want proof. Fine, let facts be submitted to a candid world.

1. The Racism Question

As faithful readers of La Russophobe will already know, some time ago La Russophobe asked why David Johnson didn’t have a category devoted to race violence on his website.

One of La Russophobe‘s intrepid readers took it upon himself to find out, and asked Mr. Johnson himself that very question. Here is the answer he got:

Steve Welsh (swelsh@cdi.org) maintains the web site. I’m forwarding this message to him. One very important matter is that the website for JRL is far from complete. This is for copyright reasons. Many of the pieces that appear in the email version are NOT archived.

Not exactly “My gosh, you’re right! We’re missing such a topic and we’re going to get working on creating one right away!” now is it? La Russophobe dares to wonder what MLK would think of this response.

Undeterred, the intrepid reader asked the same question of Mr. Welsh, surprised to find out that Mr. Johnson would evade the question in this manner. Here is Mr. Welsh’s response:

Thank you for your interest in the Johnson’s Russia List web site. The starting point for content is the E-Newsletter, edited by David Johnson, and one priority I do make is to highlight original commentary prepared especially for that forum and therefore submitted to David Johnson for his review. If you are a subscriber you undoubtedly are familiar with that phenomenon, and the various types of contributions he features in the List. If past articles on racial violence related to particular ideologies or movements they might be under the Politics topic. The human rights topic is probably limited to conduct by a government or insurgents. There also is a Google search function that can be JRL-specific. Please do know that I share your obvious concern over violence, and compassion for its victims.

So, the upshot was that it turns out David Johnson’s readership has not provided him with any original material on race violence and that Mr. Johnson is afraid to include any material published by third parties on his website because of copyright claims being made against him. And in fact, he’s really not all that hot to have coverage of race violence on the website at all. Because, after all, Is David Johnson really incapable of negotiating with the providers of such material to be allowed to include them under a topic on his website? It seems unlikely. Assuming it were so, is he really so craven as to be put off from dealing with this important topic on his website because of threats of litigation? Say it ain’t so.

But, of course, there is an obvious solution, and the reader raised it in a followup message to Mr. Johnson: Why not simply ask readers to provide original material, and in the meantime why not include material from government reports such as those La Russophobe has already dealt with, specifically reports from the U.S. State Department and Amnesty International. No copyright concerns there. When the reader asked Mr. Johnson to do so, here’s the response he got:

Let me clarify something. Johnson’s Russia List is basically a daily email (I repeat, email) newsletter that goes to about 7000 almost every day. That is the version of JRL that really matters. The incomplete archive is NOT central, although it is useful. Plenty of material of racial and bias issues appears in the email version of JRL. That is the JRL that people around the world use and value. I would politely suggest that you not get overly focused on the JRL archive.

Yet, as the reader pointed out, the world wide web is available to a much larger audience than the circulation of the e-mail, and each e-mail contains a large volume of material amid which stories about racial violence could easily get lost. In fact, a diehard Neo-Soviet propagandist, a clever one, wouldn’t try to hide facts about racism in Russia (Pravda covers them often). But they’d bury them amid a mountain of other stuff so they message would get watered down and lost in translation. And more important, they’d manipulate them into an argument for the enlargement of the Kremlin’s power so as to maintain “law and order.”

Those people would be evil, of course.

What’s more, if original material doesn’t currently exist, doesn’t that tend to imply that JRL readers are not sufficiently motivated by the current coverage to develop any meaningful progress initiatives or even a dialogue.

Finally, if a JRL reader wants to retrieve information about race violence from prior issues, without a topic on the website there is no effective way of doing so (since, as Mr. Johnson admits, the archives are incomplete; La Russophobe has also found the search mechanism rather haphazard, to say the least). In other words, the issue of race violence is being significantly dilluted and swept under the carpet by the JRL, and it has no plans to change that situation any time soon.

When the reader followed up again with Mr. Johnson (frankly, La Russophobe’s hat is off to this reader, she would have given up long before), asking whether the reader himself could provide the information for inclusion on the website, he was informed:

We would likely give serious consideration to such a category in the JRL archive. However, we know nothing about your qualifications to participate in our enterprise. As you have no familiarity with Johnson’s Russia List and no apparent expertise on Russia it is difficult for us to work with you.

Thus, apparently Mr. Johnson is only willing to consider information about racism in Russia for inclusion on the website from a “properly” credentialed expert. An ordinary lay person, such as the reader, will not be permitted to direct Mr. Johnson to the appropriate public domain material, nor will Mr. Johnson do anything on his own to recruit such persons. Isn’t that convenient? La Russophobe dares to wonder what MLK would think of this response.

Therefore, La Russophobe encourages readers who have the “proper” credentials to collect and submit original material about race violence in Russia, perhaps just their own summaries of published accounts, many of which are provided on this blog, and ask Mr. Johnson to publish them on his website so that they are available for anyone who is interested to see. Until that happens, La Russophobe will see Mr. Johnson through MLK’s eyes as more part of the problem than of the solution. La Russophobe will start the ball rolling by pointing out that this post has a recitation of the State Department and Amnesty International report information, as well as a summary to two important recent news stories from major publications, and is not subject to any copyright restrictions since La Russophobe hereby waives them and authorizes Mr. Johnson to make whatever use of it he likes. No credit to La Russophobe is necessary. She does not know whether she qualifies for submission or not.

The ball’s in your court, Mr. J, and in the court of all the other “white moderates” who read your newsletter. Show your true colors, if you please.


2. The Felgenhaur Issue

Not that Johnson is alone in this regard; consider too the case of the Moscow Times. The paper could be doing much more than it is to confront the rise of the Neo-Soviet Union, particularly by publishing weekly op-ed columns by people who really know how to attack the Kremlin where it lives. One writer, Pavel Felgenhaur, began to approach this sort of writing and, as soon as he did, the Times promptly fired him. This is how Felgenhaur explained the matter on the Johnson’s Russia List, and the “white moderate” world simply let the matter drop. La Russophobe asked Johnson about the situation in February 2006 and he replied: “I believe the Moscow Times did not carry his article because the editor felt the column did not have adequate factual support. What exactly happened after I don’t know. Whether Felgenhauer quit or something else…I don’t know.” La Russophobe wonders how many times Martin Luther King was attacked for lacking “adequate factual support.” Remembering that Felgenhaur only wrote an op-ed column and that the Times was therefore not being asked to put the imprimateur of a news story on Felgenauer’s report, and given that Johnson felt the story had enough gravitas to run it, and given that Felgenhaur has been risking his life for years as a journliast directly confronting the Kremlin and has never been accused of inaccuracy before, the Times action has the distinct smell of mere cowardice, especially since the paper didn’t choose to publicly explain its actions and was willing to sacrifice Felgenhaur’s column, which no longer appears in the paper.

Felgenhaur wrote the following to Johnson in October 2005:

Dear David,

I have a serious conflict of opinion with the chief editor of The Moscow Times Lynn Berry concerning the situation in Nalchik, Kabardino-Balkaria and I believe the public must be informed about it. I have sent several letters to Berry, have got no response whatsoever and would be much obliged if you could put the story on your list. Berry decided not to publish my regular column this week that was filed Sunday and was about the tragedy in Nalchik, but the story is, I believe, more important than a simple clash of opinion between editor and columnist. Today there is mounting evidence from eyewitnesses in Nalchik that the rebel attack or uprising on Oct. 13 was followed by a rampage by security forces, by random revenge killings, ethnically and religiously motivated murder of suspects from the minority Balkar tribe by the local police force that is predominately Kabardin. Eyewitnesses (I met and had contact with some) that are in no way connected with the rebels ethnically or religiously, not only report horrific stories of indiscriminate killings, a massacre, but also say that the number of dead in Nalchik is several times higher than officially reported and that there are over 300 corpses in the local morgue. There is a cover-up of the alleged massacre in Nalchik that is run by the Russian state propaganda machine and it seems that The Moscow Times has succumb to becoming part of this cover-up. Not only have they rejected my column, which could have been a coincidence, but also their reporting of events in Nalchik is a copy-story of government propaganda. The Tuesday Oct. 18 report in MT on the situation in Nalchik by staff writer Nabi Abdullaev quotes Russian newspapers Izvestia and Gazeta that cite relatives of dead Nalchik residence that the police planted arms and ammunition on their bodies to claim they were terrorists. A disclaimer follows the quote: “The reports could not be independently verified.” None of reports or quotes from government and security officials that fill up the rest of Abdullaev’s text has the same disclaimer though “independent verification” was indeed lacking in most cases. The situation is especially urgent and of great public concern, because the killings in Nalchik have not stopped ­ bloody cleansing or zachistki, accompanied by heavy shooting are continuing in residential areas. It is possible that the Nalckik situation, if the repression is left unnoticed, will turn into something like the tragedy in Andigan, where Uzbek solders massacred hundreds of civilians last summer.

Best,

Pavel Felgenhauer
Independent defense analyst. Moscow.

———
The column.
[Nalchik Violence and Government Conduct]
By Pavel Felgenhauer

The attack by rebels last week on Nalchik – the capital Kabardino-Balkaria – was hardly a surprise. Local authorities have been accused by human rights organization of brutal suppression of Islam and of closing mosques in the predominantly Muslim Kabardino-Balkaria. Experts have warned the Kremlin that repressions will backfire. The security services and their local cadre in Kabardino-Balkaria still do not know for sure where did the rebels come from, how many fighters were involved in the attack, how many fled after the shootout and were to. The official line is that the attackers were Islamic militants or Wahhabis, but nowadays all armed resistance forces in the Northern Caucasus are universally branded by the Kremlin as “Wahhabis” and “international Islamist terrorists.”

The authorities have accused well-knownChechen warlords Shamil Basayev and Doku Umarov of contributing forces to the attack on Nalchik. Again, the Russian security services do not seem to know how many if any Chechens were involved or how did they penetrate Kabardino-Balkaria that does not have a common border with Chechnya. It’s possible that our security officials are deriving their information on the Nalchik attack from rebel Web sites, because they do not have any reliable agents of the ground. Small groups of rebels of 3 to 10 men simultaneously attacked police stations and other military targets (9 locations in all) in Nalchik last Thursday at 9 am. Most of the engagements lasted about an hour, and then the rebels melted away before Russian reinforcements could enter the city. Security forces and army units began putting up roadblocks around Nalchik long after most of the action was over and these pickets did not cover the entire perimeter of the city. Three small groups of rebels (less than 20 men, most of them wounded) were stranded in Nalchik and were killed by Special Forces the next day. The authorities have announced that 92 rebels have been killed, 37 – taken prisoner, 24 security force members and 12 civilians perished and that there are over a hundredwounded.

After the Beslan school hostage-taking last year that ended in the loss of over 300 innocent lives, there was much fear that something as bad may happen in Nalchik. Vladimir Putin has praised the security forces for preventing the capture of schools and mass hostage taking, though there is no evidence that the rebels had any intention to capture any school. There is also no evidence that if the rebels would have in fact attack the civilian population in Nalchik, the security forces, could have done anything to stop them. The Kremlin has declared the entire engagement a victory, arguing that the rate of casualties is strongly in favor of the security forces. But the official body count raises many questions.

The history of contemporary urban anti-guerrilla engagements by Russian forces in the Caucasus, Americans in Iraq and so on, indicates that dislodging, killing or capturing over a hundred determined fighters, holed up within a big modern city requires much effort, a week or so of action and lots of tanks, heavy guns and attack aircraft support. The casualty list, the duration of the fight and it’s intensify in Nalchik do not match do not match each other. Information has been coming out of Nalchik that many families are reporting that young men are missing without explanation. It would seem that after the original rebel force mostly melted away, the security forces began revenge attacks against the population, kidnapping and killing suspects more or less at random. This may explain the abnormally large number of “terrorists” killed. Local security officials could have used the occasion to settle old scores with suspected “Wahhabis,” while the large number of dead “terrorists” pleased the Kremlin and allowed it to declare victory. In the past human rights groups have accused security forces in the Caucasus of constantlykidnapping and massacring civilians, including women and children to terrorize local populations to into accepting rule from Moscow. Now Putin, during a televised meeting with his security chiefs last Friday, has indorsed the same policy in Kabardino-Balkaria: “We have acted ruthlessly and will do the same in the future.” Heavy-handed Russian policies have in the pastonly fanned the flames in the Caucasus. Repression, kidnappings by security forces, mass murder – have increased hatred, recruited new rebels and caused the conflict to spread out of Chechnya over the region. Another victory, another “liberated city,” some have been “liberated” so many times, they have been flattened.

La Russophobe herself asked David Johnson about the resolution of this issue, and he said there was none. He published Felgenhaur’s statement and felt that was all he needed to do. Thus, apparently the issue is simply hanging there. If any of La Russophobe‘s readers have more details, please do let her know. Specifically, Mr. Johnson stated:

I believe the Moscow Times did not carry his article because the editor felt the column did not have adequate factual support. What exactly happened after I don’t know. Whether Felgenhauer quit or something else…I don’t know.

In other words, once again, he doesn’t want to get involved, and if Felgenhaur, a brilliant writer, drops off the face of the Earth, so be it.

Yet Another Elected Offical Arrested by Kremlin

The Moscow Times reports on yet another arrest of a potential Kremlin rival elected to office. First a governor, then three senators and now a mayor. Welcome to the Neo-Soviet Union, where the Russian people stand idly and cowardly by and watch it happen.

Volgograd’s prosecutor opened a criminal case Wednesday against Mayor Yevgeny Ishchenko, possibly laying the groundwork for the end of direct mayoral elections, political analysts said.

Ishchenko was the first mayor of a big city to be arrested and charged with abuse of office and conducting illegal business.

Political analysts said the Kremlin was looking to secure loyal city leaders to guarantee a good showing for United Russia in State Duma elections next year and a smooth handover of power to President Vladimir Putin’s designated successor in 2008.

Ishchenko is a member of United Russia.

“Since the scrapping of direct gubernatorial elections, the Kremlin has been trying to find a way to put an end to mayoral elections,” said Maxim Dianov, head of the Institute for Regional Problems. “This arrest could give them the chance to follow through on that plan.”

Volgograd Governor Nikolai Maksyuta said Wednesday that he had given orders to appoint an acting governor, Gazeta.ru reported. “Today my deputy will appoint an acting [mayor],” he said from Moscow. “Tomorrow, when I come back, I will finish the job.”

Maksyuta added that the law permitting direct elections of mayors should be changed “in order to get some subordination.”

In Volgograd, a statement from the prosecutor’s office said that Ishchenko “for the past three years has used his power in a way that conflicts with the duties of his position,” Interfax reported.

The prosecutor’s statement added that Ishchenko gave Tamerlan, a firm that owns Pyatyorochka supermarkets, tax breaks and other advantages.

Prosecutors also accused Ishchenko of doling out in 2005 and 2006 unwarranted bonuses to city employees.

In April, United Russia deputies drafted legislation allowing governors to confiscate the powers of mayors who managed their cities poorly.

Under the proposal, mayors would lose most of their powers in the event of natural disaster, debt exceeding 30 percent of the city’s revenue intake or mismanagement by the city of federal subsidies.

The Duma is expected to consider the legislation before the end of its spring session.

Dianov said governors, who are appointed by the Kremlin, had lost interest in cultivating rural voters. Those voters, who comprise one-third of the country’s voting population and will play a key role in upcoming elections, are controlled by mayors of small cities and towns.

“The Kremlin fully controls the governors, who will work to guarantee a good showing for United Russia, but they don’t have the complete control of the mayors,” Dianov said.

The Kremlin, Dianov said, wants authority over of big-city mayors because they control a large portion of the revenues that flow into federal coffers.

The arrest of the mayor of Volgograd, a city of 1.2 million, would make it easier for the presidential administration to justify scrapping mayoral elections as part of an anti-corruption campaign, Dianov said.

Mikhail Kuznetsov, the governor of the Pskov region, said as much Wednesday when he called for the Kremlin to abolish mayoral elections.

“Only when mayors are elected by governors will it be possible, first, to guarantee a high level of responsibility at all levels of government, and secondly, to stop shaking public opinion with fabricated criminal cases,” Kuznetsov said, Interfax reported.

Ishchenko, perceived at home as closer to Moscow businessmen than local entrepreneurs, had battled with the local branch of United Russia, said Yury Korgunyuk, an analyst at the Indem think-tank. The pro-Kremlin party balked when the mayor opted not to give many city jobs to party members, Korgunyuk said.

The Volgograd branch of United Russia had proposed to its leadership that it expel Ishchenko from the party.

About 300 people gathered Wednesday near Volgograd’s City Hall to call for Ishchenko’s dismissal, Interfax reported.

Russian Pundit Defends Attacks on Gays

Writing in RIA Novosti, Russian pundit Pyotr Romanov defended his country’s recent pogrom against homosexuals seeking to express their civil rights (the headline read “Homophobic Russia Shocks Europe, but What about Sodom & Gomorrah?”):

An unsanctioned Gay Pride parade was dispersed in central Moscow a few days ago. The entire European homosexual community watched the developments closely, as did the Council of Europe, the European Human Rights Commissioner, and parliamentarians-two French and two German Parliament members, who had come to Moscow to support the marchers and were detained by the police.

The day for the parade was chosen to coincide with the start of Russia’s Council of Europe presidency. There are people in Western political circles who are as outraged by this as they are by Russia’s G8 presidency and the upcoming summit in St. Petersburg.

Gay rights activists proceed from the trends and rules of conduct that dominate in present-day Europe, and they demand that Russia follows the same rules. They totally ignore the Russian public mentality and the very short time that has passed since the collapse of the U.S.S.R. Another important factor is Russia’s severe demographic crisis. Same-sex couples are the last thing Russia needs, with its plummeting birth rates.

Opinions clash on whether the police had to be so tough on the marchers. But then, the police had their excuse. The flowers gays were to lay to the Unknown Soldier’s Tomb at the Kremlin wall, one of Russia’s most precious shrines, looked to some people as a deliberate provocation. Gay Pride organizers knew what they were doing-they meant the police to look as shocking as possible in television reports, and the cops swallowed the bait. Again, for an umptieth time, they failed to oppose a provocation with the professionalism expected of them.

Be all that as it may, an unbiased person will hardly allege any harsh reprisals against sexual minorities in today’s Russia. There are numerous gay clubs, and gays work on television and in the show business. There are homosexuals among State Duma members, and several political parties offer sexual minorities their support.

The majority of the Russians, however, still have a negative attitude toward gays. Russians are getting back to church, from which Bolsheviks violently kicked them in their time. As they regain faith and open the Scripture, Russians cannot miss its references to Sodom and Gomorrah, in which they do not differ from religious people all over Europe. The Russian Orthodox Church is not the only one to denounce homosexuality-in this it is joined by the Roman Catholic Church and other Christian denominations.

As the Council of Europe’s Human Rights Commissioner thinks, religious believers can sometimes be wrong, so all flowers ought to bloom on earth, homosexuality included. Same-sex couples must be allowed to get married and adopt children.

The Commissioner and other defenders of sexual minorities are not unlike Bolsheviks in their invincible belief that the truth is on their side. Blinded by their convictions, Bolsheviks made sure everyone lived according to their laws and doctrine. Now, Europeans are just as sure that homosexuality is not a sin but every citizen’s legal right. Why this steadfast assurance? Has any of the advocates of same-sex love ever come back from the dead with thorough knowledge of the other world’s ways and judgments? Just why are they so sure that tolerance revitalizes and not corrupts the community?

There are no answers to these questions. A religious person also cannot say how he knows his convictions are right-he just feels that way, the same as his opponents do. Neither side has any firm proof of its point, so why should Russia follow the Council of Europe on this issue? Why is it to believe the Human Rights Commissioner and not the Pope or the Patriarch of All Russia?

The Council of Europe is determined to have its will at all costs. Russians cannot sympathize with its Bolshevist determination after the nation was driven for several decades along the road considered to be the only right way. That road led Russia to the brink of an abyss, as we all know. Can we be sure the road charted by the Council of Europe will not bring us, another several decades later, to rename Moscow Sodom and St. Petersburg Gomorrah?

We Russians have had enough guidance. We want to choose our own road independently. After all, that choice is what democracy is all about.

We are willing to enter into discussion if the Council of Europe sees the matter differently-but only without moralizing. After all, Europe’s present-day morals are too lax to do any moralizing.

So, as La Russophobe understands it, Russians feel that the Gay Pride Parade was in fact a devious European plan to subvert Russia’s national security by causing various moral calamities associated with homosexuality to infiltrate Russia and turn it into a pornographic wasteland, which Russia isn’t now (but see Pravda‘s feature on Russian “eroticism“). In fact, by opposing rights for homosexuals Russia is standing up to a group just as invidious as the Bolsheviks. Oh, and laying flowers on a grave constitutes an act of irresistable provocation that simply cries out for night sticks.

Well, glad that is all nice and cleared up. Thank goodness for Russia, salvation of mankind!

Heritage Foundation Calls for Organized Opposition to Kremlin’s Assault on NGOs

Yevgeny Volk, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Moscow office, has issued a clarion call to action against the Kremlin’s vicious assault on foreign NGOs, which can now be seen in a the broader context of an overall attack on all democratic institutions, including the outright arrest of numerous elected officials in recent days.

Volk writes:

As NGOs feared, the regulations issued by the government agencies in response to the law have introduced harsh restrictions on NGO performance. From now on, NGOs will have to report every detail of their activities. An activity report form is seven small-print pages long and includes accounts of performance, both of the substance of an NGO’s work and its expenses. If money is spent on putting on events, the NGO must detail their number, the topics, and participation. Foreign organizations, such the Heritage Foundation’s Moscow office, also must indicate the cost of office supplies. The regulations will significantly increase an NGO’s expenses.

Russian rights organizations are unanimous in their belief that the worst expectations of this new law are justified. If an NGO cannot be banned directly, the red tape, all-out control, endless check-ups, and a stepped-up financial burden could smother it.

What America Can Do to Support Freedom in Russia

To promote democracy and arrest Russia’s drift to autocracy the Bush Administration should take a resolute action. It should do the following:

  • Conduct permanent monitoring of the freedom situation in Russia;
  • Evaluate the scale and nature of the abuse of individual freedom in Russia;
  • React decisively and protest violations of basic freedoms;
  • Engage the Russian government in public discussions on every level on the status of freedom in Russia;
  • Criticize the NGO law and its implementation practices at the G8 Summit in St. Petersburg;
  • Encourage the U.S. OSCE Commission to hold regular hearings on the status of freedom in Russia;
  • Call for sanctions against Russia in case of its violent abuse of freedom; and
  • Provide broad support to the freedom movement in Russia by contacts with freedom fighters, inviting them to international forums, rendering them political and moral assistance.

Russian NGOs and foreign NGO representative offices in Russia remain the stronghold of nascent civil society and freedom in Russia. The work of these organizations cannot be strangled by the intrusions of the Russian government.

Russia Still Light Years From Control Over Chechnya

Every time there is an outbreak of violence in Iraq, America is ridiculed for failing to win the peace there. Yet, Russia has been struggling far longer in Chechnya, much smaller and far closer to Russia, with less condemnation. Reuters reports the most recent oubreak of deadly violence:

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Five armed insurgents, one police officer and a bystander were killed on Wednesday in separate clashes near Russia’s turbulent region, local media reported.

The bodies of three rebels were recovered from a house in the Ingushetia region, where police had trapped them after pursuing them from neighboring Chechnya, Itar-Tass news agency reported. It said one police officer was killed.

Two insurgents were killed in a gunfight with police in the nearby region of Dagestan, which also borders Chechnya, Interfax news agency reported. A bystander was hurt in the shooting and later died in hospital, the agency said.

Chechen rebels have fought a decade-long war for independence from Moscow. Russian forces have contained that rebellion but are now fighting an insurgency that has spread to other parts of the poor and mainly Muslim North Caucasus region.

Analysts say the insurgency is driven by militant Islamist ideas and resentment at police harassment. In some areas the fighting is also linked to organized crime.