Anna Politkovskaya

A Russian Diary

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  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    the months that followed, right up until March 14, 2004, when Putin was indeed elected, the checks and balances within the state vanished, and the only restraint was the president's conscience
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    consider that the Union of Right Forces played an enormous part in unleashing the Chechen war. It was the only party that could in any way be described as democrat‍
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    democratic and in favor of civil society, yet they chose to say that the Russian Army was being reborn in Chechnya, and that anybody who thought otherwise was a traitor who was stabbing the Russian troops in the back.”
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    Vasilii Aksyonov complained that the liberals had failed to exploit the unsavoriness of the Yukos affair.
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    2003 a majority of our citizens heartily supported the imprisonment, through the efforts of members of United Russia, of the oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky* head of the Yukos oil company.
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    The electorate was offered a variety of patriotism to suit every taste. Rodina offered rather heroic patriotism; United Russia, moderate patriotism; and the Liberal Democrat Party, outright chauvinism.
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    The Rodina Party is another chauvinistic organization, led by Dmitry Rogozin* and created by the Kremlin's spin doctors specifically for this election.
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    Overall in Saratov Province, United Russia gained 48.2 percent of the vote without feeling the need to publish or defend a manifesto. The Communists got 15.7 percent, the Liberal Democrats* (Vladimir Zhirinovsky's* party) 8.9 percent, the nationalistic Rodina (Motherland) Party* 5.7 percent. The only embarrassment was that more than 10 percent of the votes cast were for “None of the above.” One-tenth of the voters had come to the polling station, drunk the vodka, and told the lot of them to go to hell.
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    The province's electoral commission had a hotline to take reports of irregularities during the campaign and the voting, but 80 percent of the calls were simply attempts to blackmail the local utility companies. People threatened not to vote unless their leaking pipes were mended or their radiators repaired.
  • b8783459309has quoted2 years ago
    The Saratov election campaign was marked by violence, with candidates not approved of by United Russia being beaten up by “unidentified assailants” and choosing to pull out of the race.
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