#8 - JRL 2007-263 - JRL Home
Kremlin.ru
www.Kremlin.Ru
December 23, 2007
Transcript of the [Putin] Meeting with Members of Russia’s
Constitutional Court
PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN: Good day, dear colleagues!
The year 2007 is coming to an end. It has been filled with large and
important political events, and the most important has been without doubt the
elections to the State Duma.
The Constitutional Court supported the change to a proportional system of
voting. Both theory and practice have shown that this decision was justified.
Eleven political parties took part in the election campaign. The largest of them
went to the State Duma, and voter turnout, a very important indicator, was the
highest in recent years.
On 12 December, we celebrated Constitution Day, and in this regard I would
like to point out that, as we have repeatedly stressed, the constitution is the
Basic Law of the country, without question the foundation of the modern Russian
state. It ensures the priority of citizens’ rights and freedoms and preserves
stability and harmony in society.
During the 16 years of its existence, the Constitutional Court has
accumulated a wealth of experience in constitutional proceedings. And today it
is important to maintain the very high professional standard that it has set.
When the issue of further strengthening the material and technical basis of
the Constitutional Court was resolved on the initiative of the State Duma, it
was decided to locate the Constitutional Court here, in one of the most
beautiful architectural ensembles not only in Russia but also in the world.
And this move has conceptual as well as aesthetic significance for our
country. The history of Russian statehood is bound up with this ensemble. It was
here that the Senate and the Synod, the outstanding symbols of Russian
statehood, were founded. And for those who love and cherish the pages of Russian
history, of course, the original plans for putting up a hotel and similar
concerns using foreign capital, were if not blasphemous at least unpersuasive.
And the decision that was taken by the deputies of the State Duma to situate
the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation here, right beside the Boris
Nikolayevich Yeltsin Presidential Library, was in my view the best possible
decision. In addition, we resolved another very important issue: we moved the
Russian State Historical Archive out of its completely unsuitable and hazardous
location into its new setting, a brand new complex built especially for it, a
modern convenient place for archivists to do their work. And we now have every
reason to believe that the Historical Archive will be at home in its new
environment for a long time, and the historical memory of our people will be
properly maintained.
I would like to congratulate you on this event, on the move into this
complex, and to wish you success with your work. I want to say that today I will
be signing a decree concerning the timing of the move, as well as discussing
with you the terms for ensuring the security of the Constitutional Court in the
future.
I wish you a Happy New Year!
All my best wishes for your success!
VALERII ZORKIN, CHAIRMAN OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT: On behalf of the
Constitutional Court, I would like to thank you for your assessment of our work.
I think that this is not occasioned by some servile sense of gratitude but
the recognition that we have a Constitution, and under our Constitution, the
President is the guarantor of the Basic Law and provides for the smooth
coordination of all our authorities’ activities.
As one of the supreme bodies of state power in Russia, the Constitutional
Court of course exerts every effort to face up to the challenge of protecting
the constitutional order, ensuring the rights and freedoms of our citizens, and
guaranteeing the security of the individual, society and the state.
We are indeed faced with a variety of difficult situations. From time to time
judges must make very difficult choices, and it is most important that we choose
the correct road to follow. Here the general atmosphere of the state and the
constructive interaction with authorities that has been created in recent years
have been important.
This year was indeed for us that much more noteworthy as a very important
stage in the preparation for the elections, and we had very difficult
discussions that found their way into society as a whole. These were all about
the electoral system and the threshold for the number of parties. We believe
that we made the right decision, because the result have shown that pluralism, a
multi-party system and the principles of the rule of law in the country have
been maintained.
It would certainly be inappropriate for me to praise our work, and therefore
I will not engage in that. The more criticism we have, the better and more
productive our future work will be.
Because we are now in this new building that has such symbolic importance for
Russia, I would particularly like to emphasise what you have said: at the
various stages of its development Russia has appeared in different guises – as
an empire, the Soviet Union, contemporary Russia – but in all these stages, we
have still had to deal with the same Russia, in the sense that it is our
country, our Fatherland, and this is reflected in the preamble to the
Constitution of the Russian Federation.
The fact that we are now in this building, namely, the principal judicial
institution in the Russian Empire, is also significant, because up until this
stage in the history of Russia, the courts have not been housed in anything that
could be called a palace of justice. On the contrary, they were in cobbled
together huts and tottering peasant houses, which makes what has been done now
simply amazing.
It should be explicitly said that we the judges knew that when you launched
this idea that it would come to fruition. I think that if it had not been for
the will of the President, this project would never have been realised.
But I want to emphasise that I think the country deserves to have the
Constitutional Court located in the most important palace of justice in the
land.
As delegations we have visited other countries, and I can say with the utmost
confidence that where there are constitutional courts, no country in the world
has such a building for its highest court or Constitutional Court, including the
palaces of Western Europe. In a very real sense this is not just a complex but a
genuine palace.
I would especially like to emphasise that the entire edifice was designed and
implemented as a complex and not just a building, as was all its infrastructure.
We hope that we can move here by the deadline that has been set. There are all
sorts of consequences associated with the implementation of justice here, in our
northern capital.
Once again thank you very much.
VLADIMIR PUTIN: I will just say a word or two because I was building on what
Valerii Dmitrievich just said about our northern capital. I must say that for
the city that is also a symbolic event, because we are accustomed to call
Petersburg our second capital, our northern capital, but before it performed
none of the functions of a capital. By moving the Constitutional Court here, we
are giving Petersburg such a function and now we really can call St Petersburg
our second capital.
But to ensure that we keep to schedule – and in the decree that I am about to
sign we have set the date of completion as 21 May 2008 – to move this project
which started from nothing a year and a half, two years ago, to where it is now,
we created an interdepartmental working group, headed by Dmitrii Anatoyevich
Medvedev which he still chairs. And I want to thank him too, as well as all of
our colleagues who were engaged in the organisation of this work. I hope that
they will do everything to ensure that the challenge of moving the Court here
will be met.
Dmitry Anatolyevich, please.
DMITRII MEDVEDEV: Thank you, Vladimir Vladimirovich. Dear colleagues, dear
Vladimir Vladimirovich. I am also very pleased that such a huge task has been
accomplished so quickly. A large team of people carried out this work, both
constructing the building and dealing with other issues related to the move.
Their skill in working together has manifested itself in this brilliant result.
Speaking frankly, I must say that when I came here a year and a half ago with
Valery Dmitrievich, I was horrified by the conditions of our State Archive. As
Vladimir Vladimirovich has just said, this is the best demonstration of how
quickly and effectively a number of important challenges for the state can be
resolved.
As for the symbolism of the building and location of the Constitutional
Court, I think that it is very important that the Constitutional Court will in
the future do its work in new place in Russia’s history, and that one of the
most important branches of government will carry out its functions independently
in a different place, not in our capital but in another city, in our northern
capital. In fact, this strengthens our state and its federal nature when one
branch of government begins its work in a location other than Moscow. This, too,
I think is very important for strengthening our country.
VLADIMIR PUTIN: Valerii Dimitrievich, I am pleased to sign the decree
concerning moving the Constitutional Court to the city of St Petersburg. Once
again, I warmly congratulate you all. Thank you.
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