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Bridging the Gap Between Russia and San Francisco Preparations for the 2012 APEC summit transform Vladivostok’s skyline as residents ask what happens when the Kremlin turns its attention elsewhere.
and I felt it had many characteristics of Vladivostok-3000.”
Vladivostok-2012
These days Vladivostok blazes with welders’ flames and cranes dot its hilly downtown, demonstrating the billions of dollars the federal government is pumping into the city. The narrow, potholed road from the airport has been raised up to 10 feet in some areas and expanded into a modern, four-lane freeway; the new airport is scheduled to open this summer. Two Hyatt hotels are under construction; monuments, roads and facades have been repaired; and an express train link from the airport to the city center will soon open. One of the most impressive projects nearing completion is the bridge to Russky Island — the closest island to Vladivostok — and a new campus for the Far Eastern Federal University. The two-mile-long bridge, partially held up by masts standing on two artificially constructed islands, was started less than three years ago. When completed this summer, it will be the longest cablestayed bridge in the world.. “When we talk about innovation and modernization, this is it,” said Alexander Ognevsky, press secretary for the Ministry of Regional Development, as he gestured toward the bridge. “A number of international companies left the tender because they said it couldn’t be done; in the end, a firm from Omsk took on the contract. The technology and know-how they developed with this project will be applied elsewhere and even exported abroad.”
ARTEM ZAGORODNOV
© VITALY ANKOV_RIA NOVOSTI
RUSSIA BEYOND THE HEADLINES
In 1959, after a visit to California, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev called on the residents of Russia’s Pacific port of Vladivostok to make it“our San Francisco.” Half a century later, Russia’s leaders are determined to realize his dream as the city prepares to host the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in September. Similarities between the two cities jump in the face of any firsttime visitor to Vladivostok: the buildings and streets meandering up and down the hills surrounding Golden Horn Bay; the tramways dotting the main thoroughfares; Chinatown; a booming harbor; and the ever-present morning fog.Vladivostok even has a liberal-leaning political climate — Prime MinisterVladimir Putin garnered 47.5 percent of the vote here compared to a national average of 63.75 percent in Russia’s recent presidential election. Vasily Avchenko, the local correspondent for Russian daily Novaya Gazeta, recently co-authored a futuristic sci-fi book entitled Vladivostok-3000 with Vladivostok-born rock legend Ilya Lagutenko, who once took Russia’s pop charts by storm with his hit song, “Vladivostok-2000.” “Vladivostok-3000 is a book about two Vladivostoks,” said Avchenko. “Vladivostok-2000 is the city Ilya and I know, see and love.Vladivostok-3000 is a dream about the city I’d like to live in. I recently visited San Francisco,
The Zolotoy Rog bridge across downtown Vladivostok is nearing completion.
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NEWS IN BRIEF Alaska to Kamchatka Direct Yakutia Airlines has announced plans to revive direct flights between Anchorage, Alaska, and Petropavlosk-Kamchatksky, on Russia’s Far Eastern Kamchatka Peninsula. The flights will be scheduled weekly between July 12 and Sept. 13. Although the new service will save travelers time, at a cost of approximately $1,750 it will not be any cheaper than making the trip via Moscow. Nevertheless, researchers and adventurers praised the move. The last reguarly scheduled direct flight across the Bering Strait was shut down in 2006. Read more about Russian airlines’ plans at rbth.ru/15249
Russian Airfield to Host NATO Transit Center
AP
Regions The Pacific port city of Vladivostok pins its hopes for revitalization on an international summit
The Kremlin has agreed to allow NATO to use an airfield in Ulyanovsk, Russia, as a transit hub for supplies coming into and out of Afghanistan.When the first reports came out in the Russian press, detractors criticized the Russian government, stating that the country’s strategic interests had been betrayed. Proponents stressed the economic benefits of hosting the center and the fact that no weapons would be deployed at the hub. Read the full article at rbth.ru/15177
RusAl Elects New Chairman Following Oligarch Duel RusAl, the world’s largest aluminum company, elected Barry Cheung its chairman of the board after oligarchViktorVekselberg quit in mid-March in a shareholder dispute with RusAl C.E.O. and largest shareholder Oleg Deripaska. Cheung, who is the chairman of the Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange, joined RusAl’s board as an independent director in 2010, the same year RusAl held an I.P.O. in Hong Kong to sell 10 percent of its shares.
Corruption Conference indicates that battle against one of Russia’s biggest challenges will continue
Not Ready to Throw in the Towel MASHA CHARNAY SPECIAL TO RBTH
Less than two months before leaving his presidential post, Dmitry Medvedev sat down with a team of experts behind Russia’s Open Government initiative to discuss measures intended to help stem Russia’s rampant corruption. There was no shortage of realism at the roundtable held at the State Road Safety Center on March 22. Four years after Medvedev became the first Russian president to emphatically condemn corruption and vow to tackle it, Russia still ranks 143rd in Transparency International’s 2011 corruption index. “It is clear that this problem cannot be solved over a set period of time,”Medvedev said in his opening remarks.“No one — not I, nor the public — was under the illusion that it would take a few years.” Among the steps Medvedev took after assuming office in
2008 was founding the Anticorruption Council and instituting a law requiring government officials and their family members to disclose their holdings. More recently, Medvedev’s crusade continued with a law that oversees purchases made by government officials, requiring that any item that costs more than triple the family income be subject to scrutiny.“For the first time in Russia’s 1,000-year history,” Medvedev said,“we have a legal framework for combatting corruption.” Preliminary results show that so far the changes have yielded meager improvement. Having crept up from 154th place in Transparency International’s 2010 ranking, Russia still scores below Sierra Leone and Niger. “I am convinced that the authorities are committed to fighting corruption,”said Ivan Nineko, deputy director at Transparency International in Russia. “But at a local level more than anywhere else.” Going forward, Medvedev said, the anticorruption strategy would rest on several cornerstones. The first one — outlined by Sergei
BRICS: Moving from Economics to Politics? RBTH.RU/15255
REUTERS
As Dmitry Medevedev prepares to leave the presidency, he is working to make sure at least of one of his signature initiatives moves forward.
ONLY AT RBTH.RU
Outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev seems intent on continuing his crusade against corruption in Russia.
Guriev, rector of the New Economic School — involves deregulation and privatization. “Government interference in the economy through state ownership and excessive regulation is the main way in which a corrupt official increases his control over
society and business,”Guriev said. He added that corruption is the greatest challenge for business development in Russia as it imperils the investment climate and causes massive capital flight. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
Russian Explores Titanic 100 Years after Tragedy RBTH.RU/15262