
#1
BBC
28 December 2002
Country profile: Russia
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia has been striving to
overcome the legacy of Communism. Creating a democratic political system and a
market economy to replace the bureaucracy and centralism of the past has proved
an elusive goal.
OVERVIEW
Russia has a rich literary tradition stretching from Pushkin, Tolstoy and
Dostoyevskiy in Tsarist times to Solzhenitsyn in the Soviet era. Composers from
Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninov to Prokofyev and Shostakovich have left a lasting
musical legacy.
The country impresses with its diversity and size. Spanning 10 time zones,
this Eurasian land mass covers over 17m sq kms. Its climate ranges from the
Arctic north to the generally temperate south.
After nearly 10 years of crisis, peaking in August 1998 with the devaluation
of the rouble, the Russian economy bounced back more quickly than many expected.
However, it is heavily dependent on world oil prices.
While Russians make up over 80% of the population and Orthodox Christianity
is the main religion, there are many other ethnic and religious groups. Muslims
are concentrated among the Volga Tatars and the Bashkirs and in the North
Caucasus.
Chechnya remains a major problem for Moscow. Many thousands have died since
Russian troops were first sent in to put down a separatist rebellion in 1994 and
guerrilla fighters continue to mount attacks. However, the Kremlin has faced
less criticism from the West over its actions in Chechnya in the aftermath of
the 11 September attacks on the USA.
Russia's supportive policy on the US-led campaign against international
terrorism has also had an impact on the country's relations with Nato. The two
sides agreed in May 2002 to establish the Nato-Russia Council giving Russia an
equal role with Nato countries in decision making on policy to counter terrorism
and other security threats.
However, as illustrated by differences of emphasis on how to handle Iraq a
year on from 11 September, the conflict between Russia's pursuit of an
independent path and its need to build a new relationship with the USA and the
rest of the world continues to be played out.
FACTS
RUSSIA FACTS
Population: 148 million
Capital: Moscow
Major language: Russian
Major religions: Christianity, Islam
Life expectancy: 58 years (men), 72 years (women)
Monetary unit: 1 rouble = 100 kopecks
Main exports: Oil and oil products, natural gas, wood and wood products, metals,
chemicals, weapons and military equipment
Average annual income: US $1,660
Internet domain: .ru
International dialling code: +7
LEADERS
President: Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin
Putin: named by Yeltsin as his trusted successor
Putin started his career in the ranks of the KGB. From 1990 he worked in the
St Petersburg administration, before moving to Moscow in 1996. By August 1999 he
was prime minister.
Putin was named acting president by his predecessor, Boris Yeltsin, who
resigned on the last day of 1999.
Yeltsin introduced him as the man who could "unite around himself those
who will revive Great Russia".
Putin subsequently won elections and took office as president in his own
right in May 2000.
He has said he wants to modernise Russia and has been credited with
introducing economic reforms which have balanced the budget and cut inflation.
He also won thanks from the USA for his swift supportive response to the 11
September attacks.
Concerns about Putin's attitude to freedom of speech were reinforced when
independent TV broadcasters critical of the Kremlin were forced off the air in
the first two years of his presidency. Not everyone is convinced by the
president's insistence that this was business, not politics.
Prime minister: Mikhail Kasyanov
Foreign minister: Igor Ivanov
Interior minister: Boris Gryzlov
Defence minister: Sergei Ivanov
Finance minister: Alexei Kudrin
MEDIA
The Russian media are generally either state-owned, or controlled by large
economic groups or "oligarchs", big businessmen with diverse political
connections.
The Kremlin has tried to secure greater control over the country's main
nationwide TV networks - Channel One, RTR and NTV - to curb independent
reporting and use them to advance its own agenda.
Bringing court cases against the country's two main "oligarchs",
Boris Berezovskiy and Vladimir Gusinskiy, and acting through the industrial
groups Gazprom and Lukoil, the Kremlin wrested control of ORT (the forerunner of
Channel One), NTV and TV-6 from the two men. As a result, media freedom in
Russia suffered a setback in 2000 and 2001.
The Moskovskiy Komsomolets daily wrote in December 2001 that "Russian TV
channels have become too similar, with all of them broadcasting the same news
about the achievements of Russia under the stewardship of President Vladimir
Putin". To correct the situation, the newspaper added, each national
channel will be assigned a specialisation.
The government owns two leading news agencies. In television, flagship
station Channel One is 51% owned by the state.
The war in Chechnya is blamed for government attacks against press freedom.
Journalists have been killed in Chechnya while others have disappeared or were
abducted. In Moscow and elsewhere, journalists have been harassed or physically
abused.
The Glasnost Defence Fund reported in February 2001 that 16 journalists had
been killed in Russia in 2000 in the course of their work. It said that 26
journalists had been prosecuted and 11 illegally sacked.
The press
Rossiyskaya Gazeta - official government newspaper
Nezavisimaya Gazeta - influential independent daily
Sovetskaya Rossiya - pro-Communist daily
Argumentiy i Faktiy - popular weekly
Izvestia - leading daily controlled by tycoon Vladimir Potanin
Kommersant - liberal, business-orientated, controlled by tycoon Boris
Berezovsky
Moskovskiy Komsomolets - popular daily controlled by Moscow Mayor Yury
Luzhkov
Komsomolskaya Pravda - mass circulation, outspoken daily, controlled by
tycoon Vladimir Potanin
Krasnaya Zvezda - Defence Ministry newspaper The Moscow Times
Television
Russia TV Channel - run by the state-owned Russian State Television and Radio
Broadcasting Company (RTR)
Channel One - flagship TV channel, 51% owned by state, 49% by private
shareholders
NTV - main rival to ORT
TV-6 - Moscow. Ordered off the air.
Radio
Radio Russia - run by the state-owned Russian State Television and Radio
Broadcasting Company (RTR)
Moscow Echo - influential independent station
Radio Mayak - broadcasts throughout the Russian Federation Voice of Russia
News agencies
Itar-Tass - state-owned
RIA-Novosti - state-owned; multilingual
Interfax - independent
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