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Christian Science Monitor
May 22, 2003
Popular discontent sours St. Petersburg's big bash
Next week, Russia's 'Venice of the North' begins celebrating its tricentennial.
By Fred Weir | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA – Yelena and Alexei Sinkeyevich live in an exquisite
18th- century house facing a tiny canal crisscrossed by wrought-iron bridges in
the heart of this historic city.
Their building could star in an advertising poster for the huge celebration
next week to mark the 300th birthday of St. Petersburg, the "Window on the
West," built by reformist Czar Peter the Great.
But pass through the building's bright- red front door and the grandeur
fades. A dank, dark vestibule leads to a cracked concrete staircase. Old
brickwork peeks through gaping holes in crumbling plaster walls. The
Sinkeyeviches say there have been no repairs inside their apartment or the rest
of the state-owned building in decades, but workers did come around earlier this
month to slap fresh paint on the facades of all the houses on the block.
"It's all on the surface," says Ms. Sinkeyevich, a survivor of the
horrific 900-day Nazi siege of Leningrad who took part in the city's postwar
reconstruction. "They are just showing the city's 'parade side' for this
occasion."
The jarring contrast between hastily applied cosmetics and underlying decay
has helped turn what should be a joyous birthday bash into a firestorm of public
recrimination and controversy.
Angry residents complain that the $1.3 billion budgeted by the Kremlin to
ready St. Petersburg for its long-awaited post-Soviet coming-out party has
yielded a latter-day Potemkin Village. The gilt will begin to dim the minute
thousands of invited foreign dignitaries depart, critics say.
The Russian parliament's Accounting Chamber is investigating the
"disappearance" of tens of millions of dollars in renovation funds.
And human rights activists warn that plans to shut down the entire city center
for a week of celebrations, close the airport, and limit road access to St.
Petersburg may be unconstitutional.
"What good is a celebration that is to the detriment of the inhabitants
of the city?" says Boris Pustintsev, head of Citizen's Watch, an
independent human rights group. "One would expect things like this to
happen in North Korea, not here."
An April survey of St. Petersburgers conducted by the independent Center for
Public Opinion Studies found that 59 percent believed the planned week-long
series of parades, outdoor shows, special theater performances and church
services, beginning on May 23, will be "exclusively for the political
elite."
It wasn't supposed to be this way. Long considered one of Europe's most
beautiful cities, this Baltic "Venice of the North" has been
overshadowed by its mighty sister, Moscow, ever since the Bolsheviks moved the
capital south in 1918.
But even in its genteel Soviet-era decline, St. Petersburg's magnificent
palaces and legendary art museums attracted about 5 million tourists annually.
Recent years have seen fewer than 2 million visitors, however, while
sociologists report a net outflow of skilled labor and business investment from
the city.
The tricentennial was intended as a chance for St. Petersburg to rebound, to
show its best face to the world, and attract much-needed foreign investment.
"We hope this celebration will create a good, positive spirit in the
city," says Yevgeniya Chapligina, press spokeswoman for the official
celebrating planning committee. "We want the people of St. Petersburg to
feel proud again. It hurts when we hear all this criticism. Instead of being a
joyous occasion, the anniversary is dragged in the mud."
At the height of the festivities next week, St. Petersburg's most famous son,
President Vladimir Putin, will host almost 50 world leaders, including US
president George Bush, at a lavish party at the Konstantinovsky Palace, a
czarist-era royal residence on the Gulf of Finland that was recently renovated
at an estimated cost ranging beyond $300 million. The leaders' entourages alone
will total more than 15,000 people, while tens of thousands of other Russian
officials and foreign dignitaries are also expected.
As part of the festivities, the re-created Amber Room will be unveiled after
24 years of reconstruction. The sumptuously decorated chamber vanished after
German troops looted the Catherine Palace outside St. Petersburg during World
War II.
Since becoming president, Putin has worked hard to restore the prestige of
his native city by making it the venue for important state occasions and summit
meetings with foreign leaders. Like his professed hero, Peter the Great, Putin
has sought to highlight St. Petersburg's Western architecture, liberal spirit,
and proximity to Europe over Moscow's stifling bureaucracy, conservatism and
Asiatic feel.
But many of the authorities' efforts to make the city more presentable have
only fueled a public backlash.
Some central roads - where foreign guests are likely to drive - have been
repaved three or more times, while nearby side streets are pocked with old,
unfixed potholes. The beautiful czarist mansions and public buildings facing
Nevsky Prospekt and other downtown streets look spanking new but, when closely
inspected, they sometimes turn out to be tumbledown wrecks, their inner
courtyards strewn with garbage.
"Maybe foreigners will be fooled, but the city's residents see these
things and it really irritates them," says Igor Pavlovsky, political editor
of the independent RosBalt news agency in St. Petersburg. "Our authorities
have demonstrated that they just are not capable of organizing something like
this."
Human rights activists say police have reverted to Soviet methods by sweeping
the city of some 800 vagrants and homeless people, stepping up document checks
for all citizens, and announcing that they will close much of the downtown area
while Putin and his foreign guests are partying next week.
"It's impossible to ensure security for thousands of high-ranking
visitors without causing some inconveniences," says Ms. Chapligina.
"But we have also taken steps to involve people."
She says museums will be free, some events will be held twice - once for
VIPs, then again everyone else - and that further popular celebrations of the
city's 300th anniversary will be held later in the year.
But some experts warn that once the anniversary excitement dies down, St.
Petersburg will be no further ahead. The city's worst problem is its post-Soviet
reputation as Russia's capital of crime and corruption.
Charges by the parliament's Accounting Chamber that at least some of the
money allocated to sprucing up the city has been misspent or lost, will do
little to repair that image. At a January meeting Chamber head Sergei Stepashin
highlighted a few cases of malfeasance, including the disappearance of $30
million earmarked for road-building, which he said was "simply hidden in
the bushes."
Many in St. Petersburg blame the city's governor since 1996, Vladimir
Yakovlev, for the problems. But the fallout could spread to Putin.
"Corruption exists everywhere in Russia, but it is much more pervasive
in St. Petersburg," says Vassilisa Revtova, an expert with the Institute of
Sociology in St. Petersburg. "Instead of displaying our city's best face,
this 300th anniversary is turning into a showcase for all its worst
faults."
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