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Hoping for Spring in the Dead of Winter

In a Mexican restaurant in Novosibirsk, the unofficial capital of Siberia, the young are arguing with the old. Two recently politicised young women, made bold by vodka and one too many mojitos, are railing against the presidential campaign of their

Letter from Siberia, where Lenin and Putin are everywhere

When the Soviet Union fell, not all of the statues fell with it. In Moscow, in August 1991, protesters were quick to dispose of Lubyanka Square’s Iron Felix, the 15-tonne representation of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the founder of the secret police,

Letter from Vladivostok and a bridge over troubled waters

Seven months out from this year’s APEC conference, secured for Vladivostok by Vladimir Putin, whose likely return to the presidency next month means he will ultimately get to attend it, too, the city is a hive of construction activity. Standing

Moscow protests: authorities’ gloves may come off

More than a month has passed since Russia’s Muscovite opposition last took to the streets to protest the results of last December’s State Duma election. It takes to them again tomorrow, February 4, which coincidentally also marks the official beginning

Crooks, thieves, ex-finance minister and a blogger in Russia

Faced with a story about last month’s post-election protests in Russia, as well as about those scheduled to take place at the beginning of next, the pun-inclined headline writer might feel moved to paraphrase the great Peter Greenaway, or at

Putin a comic book hero to stir the Russian spirit

Killing time between protests — between December 10’s post-election rally and this weekend’s repeat performance — I have been reading Vladimir Putin comics. That such a genre exists is amusing, but hardly surprising. Putin has been the While both substances work according to the

Western journalists missing the real Russian roulette

Moscow-based Western correspondents spent the better part of this year holding out hope that Dmitry Medvedev might remain in the Kremlin for a second term and continue pushing his pseudo-liberal platform. Not that they ever attached that qualifying prefix, of

In Russia, a bumper season for authoritarian self-sabotage

Russian nationalists have been in the news as of late. Early last month, they marched in the Moscow suburb of Lyublino, marking the country’s Day of National Unity with signs at once anti-Kremlin and anti-Semitic. (Organisers claimed there had been