Desember 11, 2010

Attacks kill 22 civilians in Afghanistan

A U.S. military armored personal carrier vehicle passes by a damaged military check post after a suicide attack in Kunduz, north of Kabul, Afghanistan on Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010. A suicide bomber blew up a stolen police car that had been packed with explosives, injuring five Afghan soldiers and nine civilians near an army checkpoint in northern Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Fulad Hamdard)

An armored US military personal carrier passes by a damaged military check post after a bomb attack in Konduz on Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010.


December 11, 2010 (KATAKAMI / PRESSTV.IR) --- At least 22 civilians have lost their lives in a US airstrike and a roadside bomb blast in different parts of Afghanistan amid growing discontent over such attacks.


The US airstrike resulted in the deaths of at least seven people in eastern Afghanistan.

The Afghan employees of a road-construction company were the victims of the attack that took place in Zarmat district in Paktia Province.

Reports say locals have gathered at the site, expressing their anger over the attack.

The number of US-led airstrikes in Afghanistan has hit a record high. The US Air Force has released figures showing that in October alone, a total of 1,000 air raids were carried out across Afghanistan.

NATO and the US military claim the attacks target militants and their hideouts, however, such attacks often result in civilian casualties.

Civilian casualties and the deaths of Afghan security forces by so-called friendly fire have been a frequent source of tension between the Afghan government and foreign forces.

In a separate incident a roadside bomb killed at least 15 civilians, including children, in the southern province of Helmand. Four others were injured. The bomb hit the victims' pick-up truck in Khan Nashin district.

Meanwhile, a car bomb exploded outside the police headquarters in the city of Kandahar, wounding at least six people -- including four police officers.

Another bomb attack near an Afghan army base in Kondoz Province wounded at least 14 people, including nine civilians.

The bomber reportedly used a police vehicle recently stolen by militants.

US President Barack Obama recently admitted that the issue of civilian causalities had created tension between Washington and Kabul.

Obama has acknowledged that he sometimes has "blunt" conversations with his Afghan counterpart President Hamid Karzai, who has often criticized the US-led alliance for endangering civilians.

"Sometimes that conversation is very blunt. There are going to be some strong disagreements. Sometimes real tensions," the US president said at a NATO summit in Lisbon last month.

There are currently some 150,000 US-led soldiers stationed in Afghanistan.  (*)

Photostream : Bomb explodes in Afghanistan



Afghan traffic officers check the engine which is all that remained of the vehicle used in a car bomb explosion, beside a damaged vehicle, after an explosion in Kandahar south of Kabul, Afghanistan on Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010. A car bomb exploded outside a police headquarters in Kandahar, wounding at least six people and blowing out the windows of buildings up to a mile (1.6km) away, officials said. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan)

An Afghan police man stands near damaged police vehicles after an explosion in Kandahar south of Kabul, Afghanistan on Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010. A car bomb exploded outside a police headquarters in Kandahar, wounding at least six people and blowing out the windows of buildings up to a mile (1.6 km) away, officials said. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan)

An Afghan police man inspects in side of a damaged vehicle after an explosion in Kandahar south of Kabul, Afghanistan on Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010. A car bomb exploded outside a police headquarters in Kandahar, wounding at least six people and blowing out the windows of buildings up to a mile (1.6 km) away, officials said. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan)
A U.S. military armored personal carrier vehicle passes by a damaged military check post after a suicide attack in Kunduz, north of Kabul, Afghanistan on Saturday, Dec. 11, 2010. A suicide bomber blew up a stolen police car that had been packed with explosives, injuring five Afghan soldiers and nine civilians near an army checkpoint in northern Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Fulad Hamdard)

Royal attack prompts questions on UK security


Britain's Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall react as their car is attacked, in London, Thursday, Dec. 9, 2010. Angry protesters in London have attacked a car containing Prince Charles, the heir to the British throne, and his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall. An Associated Press photographer saw demonstrators kick the car in Regent Street, in the heart of London's shopping district. The car then sped off. Charles' office, Clarence House, confirmed that "their royal highnesses' car was attacked by protesters on the way to their engagement at the London Palladium this evening, but their royal highnesses are unharmed." (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)


December 11, 2010. LONDON (KATAKAMI / AP) – It was a wrong-place, wrong-time brush with danger: Protesting students — some chanting "Off with their heads!" — attacked Prince Charles and his wife Camilla as they rode in their vintage Rolls-Royce to a charity event at a London theater.

How could the mob have gotten so close, so easily, to the future king?

There was no quick answer Friday, amid scathing criticism from security experts and calls for officials to be fired.

The royal couple were unharmed but visibly shaken Thursday after the angry protesters, pumped up by earlier scuffles with police, surrounded their luxurious dark limo, smashing a rear window and splashing it with white paint.

Video and pictures from The Associated Press captured it all: Camilla, her mouth wide in horror, grasping for Charles as the rowdy crowd pummeled the car. Both were in full evening dress, Camilla's glittering emerald and diamond necklace nestled against the green satin ruffle of her coat.

Buckingham Palace does not comment on royal security procedures, but security experts identified a host of failures surrounding the royal outing — and warned that procedures must be dramatically improved before Prince William's wedding to Kate Middleton at Westminster Abbey this spring.

"It wasn't potentially dangerous — it was dangerous," said security analyst Charles Shoebridge, calling the attack "one of the most serious security breaches of the past decade."

He said the royal couple should have taken a different route to the theater, or waited until the streets were safe and clear of protesters, or simply sent their regrets and canceled.

"The best means of preventing a subject being attacked is to keep him out of harm's way in the first place," he said.

British police should have been talking with the royal protection squad to ensure the couple never came near the protests — and most certainly not in a 1977 Rolls-Royce, said Alex Bomberg, a former aide to the royal family and now CEO of a private security firm.

The prince's oversized luxury car lacked speed and maneuverability, and its large clear windows — with reinforced but not bulletproof glass — meant Charles and Camilla were clearly visible inside. With two police motorcycles in front and an official royal Jaguar behind it, the vehicle was instantly recognizable as a royal car.

"You couldn't get away in an emergency in a vintage 1977 Rolls-Royce," Bomberg said. "They should have used something more high-powered and up-to-date."

Somehow, protesters also managed to get between the police escort and the royal car.

London's theater district is a maze of narrow one-way streets and constantly crowded with tourists and theatergoers. Cars and taxis making their way through the area often crawl at a snail's pace — providing an easy target even for attackers on foot.

Without a clear escape route, the vehicle and route should never have been used, Bomberg said.

"You can't blame the royal protection squad for a bunch of anarchists' bad behavior," Bomberg said. "But you can blame someone for not doing their job correctly and not understanding the situation as it was unfolding. Someone's head should bloody roll."

Police, using live video feeds, should have kept the royal protection squad appraised of the volatile situation and been ready to change plans at a moment's notice, Bomberg said.

Metropolitan Police chief Paul Stephenson said the route was checked in advance, "including up to several minutes beforehand, when the route was still clear."

"I do think that the officers who were protecting their royal highnesses showed very real restraint. Some of those officers were armed," he said.

Police would not comment on how close armed royal protection officers came to drawing their guns.
The Metropolitan Police said it had launched a "major criminal investigation," focused on who was behind Thursday's violence.

Given the number of world leaders, royals, celebrities and tourists expected to descend on London for this spring's royal wedding, Shoebridge said the inquiry needs to be speedy so changes can be immediately put in place.

"If there is to be any silver lining, it would be that this incident provides a wake-up call to Scotland Yard to learn from this and ensure that the royal wedding passes off trouble-free," he told the AP.

There have been other royal security breaches. Princess Anne escaped a kidnapping attempt in 1974, and in 1981 six blank rounds were fired at Queen Elizabeth II as she rode on horseback. In 1982 the queen woke up to find a strange man sitting on her bed in Buckingham Palace but safely summoned security.

In 1994 a student charged at Charles while firing a starting pistol during a ceremony in Sydney, Australia, and a comedian dressed as Osama bin Laden crashed Prince William's 21st birthday party at Windsor Castle in 2003.

In the end, Thursday's fiasco seemed to come down to the royal convoy getting stuck in the wrong place at the wrong time.

The protesters, many wearing hooded sweat shirts, their faces hidden by scarves or balaclavas, had broken off from a large demonstration against university tuition hikes that was being contained by police outside Parliament.

The group headed northwest into the West End, a busy shopping and nightlife district, where the mob smashed shop windows, including those of a Starbucks, and overturned postcard stalls.

At the same time, the royal entourage was heading east from Clarence House, Charles' London home near Buckingham Palace, to the Palladium theater on the West End.

The two groups met in Regent Street, home to glossy shops including the Apple Store and Hamley's toy shop.

After the attack, the royal car continued on to the Palladium, where Charles and Camilla attended a charity performance featuring Australian pop performer Kylie Minogue, the British band Take That and singing sensation Susan Boyle.

Asked how she was after the show, Camilla was quoted as saying on the prince's website: "I'm fine thanks — first time for everything."   (*)

Desember 08, 2010

John Lennon’s Final Interview


John Lennon photographed in New York on December 8th, 1980.


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December 08, 2010 (KATAKAMI/ ROLLING STONE) --- On December 5, 1980, three days before he was murdered, John Lennon sat down with Rolling Stone's Jonathan Cott for a nine-hour interview. Select excerpts from the interview ran in Rolling Stone's tribute to John Lennon the following month — but Cott never transcribed all of the tapes. For 30 years they sat in the back of his closet.

"Earlier this year I was cleaning up to find some files in the recesses of my closet when I came across two cassette tapes marked 'John Lennon, December 5th, 1980,'" Cott says. "It had been 30 years since I listened to them, and when I put them on this totally alive, uplifting voice started speaking on this magical strip of magnetic tape."


Photos: John Lennon's Final Years ( Rolling Stone )
 
John Lennon's Last Days: Audio clips from Jonathan Cott's 1980 interview with Lennon, plus video, photos, playlists and more

Cott's interview with John Lennon — the artist's last print interview — finally hits newsstands this Friday as the centerpiece of Rolling Stone's tribute to John Lennon on the 30th anniversary of his death. In the remarkably candid interview Lennon lashes out at fans and critics who went after him during his five-year break from music. "What they want is dead heroes, like Sid Vicious and James Dean," Lennon says. "I'm not interested in being a dead fucking hero...so forget 'em, forget 'em."

Hear Clips of John Lennon's Last Interview

He also talked about plans for a possible return to the road. "We just might do it," he said. "But there will be no smoke bombs, no lipstick, no flashing lights. It just has to be comfy. But we could have a laugh. We're born-again rockers, and we're starting over...There's plenty of time, right? Plenty of time."

Yoko Ono Picks John Lennon's Best Songs

Yoko Ono also contributed an intensely personal essay to the issue about her final days with Lennon. "Just before we left the studio [minutes before he died] John looked at me," Ono writes. "I looked at him. His eyes had an intensity of a guy about to tell me something important. 'Yes,' I asked. And I will never forget how, with a deep, soft voice, as if to carve his words in my mind, he said the most beautiful things to me. 'Oh,' I said after a while, and looked away, feeling a bit embarrassed."   (*)

PM David Cameron : Long term partnership with Afghanistan

David Cameron in Afghanistan

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December 07, 2010 (KATAKAMI / NUMBER10.GOV.UK) — Prime Minister David Cameron has  announced agreement on a long-term partnership plan which will see Britain offer economic, political and military support for Afghanistan once combat troops have gone home.

The PM made the comments during a pre-Christmas visit to the country where he stayed overnight at Camp Bastion in Helmand Province before travelling to Kabul to meet President Karzai.

Mr Cameron said the planned transition to Afghan control by 2014, agreed at last month’s NATO Summit, did not mean the international community would then abandon the country.


He said:
“On the contrary, we made it clear in Lisbon that we will stand by you for the long term. Britain will remain a close and reliable partner and friend for many years to come.”

Speaking at a joint press conference with President Karzai, the PM added that 2010 was “without doubt a year in which we made real progress” and that British troops could start coming home from Afghanistan as early as next year.
“2011 must be the year in which that progress becomes irreversible, because a safer Afghanistan means a safer Britain and a safer world.”

The Prime Minister said he had seen the people of Helmand displaying more confidence in returning to their ordinary lives as the surge of troops brought improvements to the security situation.
He added:
“Of course, there is no scope for complacency. This progress is still fragile.
“But I am cautiously optimistic. We have the right strategy… we have put in the right resources to back it up and we have also given it a very clear focus on national security and we are on the right track.
“What I have seen on this visit gives me confidence that our plans for transition are achievable.”

Speaking alongside Mr Karzai in Kabul, Mr Cameron highlighted three priorities for 2011, which he said must be ”a decisive year in this campaign”:
  • to maintain the security momentum created by the military surge;
  • to begin the process of transition of security responsibility to Afghan forces; and
  • to accelerate the Afghan-led political process of integration and reconciliation of insurgents.

Photostream : Shimon Peres, Benjamin Netanyahu honors foreign firefighters


Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (front 4th L) and President Shimon Peres (front 5th L) pose for a group photo with members of International firefighting teams during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank the teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) and President Shimon Peres (R) pose for a photo with a Turkish representative during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank international teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner )

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) and President Shimon Peres (R) pose for a photo with a member from the Greek firefighting team during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank international teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner )

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) and President Shimon Peres (R) pose for a photo with a member from the Palestinian firefighting team during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank international teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner )

WikiLeaks founder is jailed in Britain in sex case

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, back to camera, is driven into Westminster Magistrates Court in London Tuesday Dec. 7, 2010 after being arrested on a European Arrest Warrant. Assange is appearing at the court for his extradition hearing for sexual assault allegations in Sweden.(AP Photo/ Stefan Rousseau/PA) 



December 08, 2010 LONDON (KATAKAMI / – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was arrested and jailed without bail Tuesday in a sex-crimes investigation, but his organization scarcely missed a beat, releasing a new batch of the secret cables that U.S. officials say are damaging America’s security and relations worldwide.

A month after dropping out of public view, the 39-year-old Australian surrendered to Scotland Yard to answer a warrant issued for his arrest by Sweden. He is wanted for questioning after two women accused him of having sex with them without a condom and without their consent.

Assange said he would fight extradition to Sweden, setting the stage for what could be a pitched legal battle. And as if to prove that it can’t be intimidated, WikiLeaks promptly released a dozen new cables, including details of a NATO defense plan for Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania that made Russia bristle.
The Pentagon welcomed Assange’s arrest.

“That sounds like good news to me,” U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on a visit to Afghanistan.
WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson insisted Assange’s arrest and the decision Tuesday by both Visa and MasterCard to stop processing donations to the group “will not change our operation.” Hrafnsson said the organization has no plans yet to make good on its threat to release en masse some of its most sensitive U.S. documents if it comes under attack.

At a court hearing in London, Assange showed no reaction as Judge Howard Riddle denied him bail while he awaits an extradition hearing Dec. 14. The judge said Assange might flee if released. When the judge asked him whether he would agree to be extradited, Assange said: “I do not consent.”

It was not publicly known which jail Assange was sent to, since British police never reveal that for privacy and security reasons. Some prisoners occasionally get Internet access, though only under close supervision.

The U.S. government is investigating whether Assange can be prosecuted for espionage or other offenses. On Tuesday, Pentagon and State Department officials said some foreign officials have suddenly grown reluctant to trust the U.S. because of the secrets spilled by WikiLeaks.

“We have already seen some indications of meetings that used to involve several diplomats and now involve fewer diplomats,” said State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley. “We’re conscious of at least one meeting where it was requested that notebooks be left outside the room.”

Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said the military had seen foreign contacts “pulling back.”
“Believing that the U.S. is not good at keeping secrets and having secrets out there certainly changed things,” Lapan said.

During the hour-long court hearing in London, attorney Gemma Lindfield, acting on behalf of the Swedish authorities, outlined the allegations of rape, molestation and unlawful coercion that were brought against Assange following separate sexual encounters in August with two women in Sweden.

Lindfield said one woman accused Assange of pinning her down and refusing to use a condom on the night of Aug. 14 in Stockholm. That woman also accused of Assange of molesting her in a way “designed to violate her sexual integrity” several days later. A second woman accused Assange of having sex with her without a condom while he was a guest at her Stockholm home and she was asleep.

A person who has sex with an unconscious, drunk or sleeping person in Sweden can be convicted of rape and sentenced to two to six years in prison.

Assange’s lawyers have claimed the accusations stem from disputes “over consensual but unprotected sex” and say the women made the claims only after finding out that Assange had slept with both.

Prosecutors in Sweden have not brought any formal charges against Assange. WikiLeaks lawyer Mark Stephens said there are doubts as to whether Sweden has the legal right to extradite him simply for questioning.
Experts say European arrest warrants like the one issued by Sweden can be tough to beat. Even if the warrant were defeated on a technicality, Sweden could simply issue a new one.

The extradition process could take anywhere from a week to two months, according to Assange’s Swedish lawyer Bjorn Hurtig. If Assange loses, he may appeal to the High Court. There can be further appeals, and Sweden also has a right to appeal if the court finds in Assange’s favor.

In the meantime, Stephens said he would reapply for bail, noting that several prominent Britons — including socialite Jemima Khan and filmmaker Ken Loach — have each offered to post 20,000 pounds ($31,500) so Assange could go free.

Australian government officials said they are providing Assange with consular assistance, as they do with any countryman arrested abroad. The consul general in London spoke to Assange to ensure he had legal representation, the government said.

Some people protested outside the London court, bearing signs reading, “Save Wikileaks, Save Free Speech” and “Trumped Up Charges.”

“I came to show my support for Julian,” said 26-year-old electrician Kim Krasniqi. “He is innocent. Europe is bullying him, They don’t want him to publish what he is publishing.”

The latest batch of confidential U.S. cables could strain relations between Washington and Moscow. The documents show that NATO secretly decided in January to defend the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania against military attack.

Dmitry Rogozin, Russia’s ambassador to NATO, said Tuesday that Moscow will demand that NATO drop the agreement, which he argued is clearly aimed at his country.

“Against whom else could such a defense be intended? Against Sweden, Finland, Greenland, Iceland? Against polar bears, or against the Russian bear?” Rogozin said.  (*)

Desember 07, 2010

Medvedev honors Soviet troops at Warsaw monument


Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev, center, and his wife Svetlana Medvedeva, left, walk after a wreath laying ceremony at a monument dedicated to thousands of Soviet officers and troops killed during World War II while driving Nazi Germans from the city, in Warsaw, Poland on Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2010. Medvedev was in Warsaw on a two-day visit to improve historically troubled relations. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

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December 07, 2010 WARSAW, Poland  (KATAKAMI / WASHINGTONPOST.COM) --- Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has paid tribute to Soviet troops killed in World War II at a memorial in Warsaw.

Tuesday's ceremony brought to an end a two-day visit to Warsaw hailed by both Polish and Russian leaders as a breakthrough in improving their historically troubled relations.

Medvedev walked solemnly behind soldiers who placed a wreath at a large monument to the thousands of Soviet troops killed while driving the Nazis from Warsaw during World War II. His wife, Svetlana, followed him and placed long-stemmed red roses.

Medvedev is traveling next to Brussels for a meeting with European Union leaders.  (*)

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange arrested in London


A detail from the Interpol website showing the appeal for the arrest of the editor-in-chief of the Wikileaks whistleblowing website, Julian Assange on December 6, 2010. Assange who has spearheaded the release of thousands of sensitive diplomatic cables through Wikileaks is wanted in Sweden on rape charges against two women, and is currently in hiding. (Photo by Getty Images)

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December 07, 2010 (KATAKAMI/ BBC) --- The founder of the whistle-blowing website Wikileaks, Julian Assange, has been arrested by the Metropolitan Police.

The 39-year-old Australian denies allegations he sexually assaulted two women in Sweden.
Scotland Yard said Mr Assange was arrested on a European Arrest Warrant by appointment at a London police station at 0930 GMT.

He is due to appear at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court later.

Mr Assange is accused by the Swedish authorities of one count of unlawful coercion, two counts of sexual molestation and one count of rape, all alleged to have been committed in August 2010.  (*)

Russian President and President of Poland discussed cooperation in economic, energy, transport, and humanitarian sectors


Official welcome ceremony. With President of Poland Bronislaw Komorowski.
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December 06, 2010 (KATAKAMI / KREMLIN.RU) --- The Russian President’s visit to Poland should give new impetus to developing Russian-Polish relations, Mr Medvedev said at a joint news conference with the Polish President. Mr Medvedev said that both countries seek pragmatic and mutually advantageous cooperation in all different areas, and that he hopes the talks will lead to intensification in interregional ties.

The Katyn issue was an important subject on the agenda at the talks. Russia has taken unprecedented steps recently to clear up ambiguity in its assessment of historical events, in particular, handing over part of the archival documents on the Katyn case to Poland. Mr Medvedev declared that this cooperation will continue and said he is certain this will help to clear up all of the difficulties in the two countries’ relations.
Concerning the investigation into the plane crash near Smolensk, the Russian President said that the political leadership and the heads of the investigative agencies will do everything possible to get objective evidence and conduct a complete and thorough investigation. The two countries’ presidents will oversee this work.

Mr Medvedev and Mr Komorowski also discussed European security issues and opportunities for Russia’s cooperation with the EU and NATO. The two leaders agreed to personally supervise humanitarian cooperation, in particular stepping up youth exchanges.

The two presidents oversaw the signing of several agreements, including a declaration on cooperation in economic modernisation, intergovernmental agreements on sea transport and cooperation in protecting the Baltic Sea from pollution by oil and other harmful substances, and a protocol of intent on establishing centres for dialogue and harmony in Russia and Poland. Cooperation agreements on postal and electronic communications were also signed, as well as agreements on cooperation between the two countries’ prosecutor generals’ offices, and on intensifying youth exchanges. (*)

Desember 06, 2010

Russia’s Medvedev arrives in Poland for ice-breaking state visit

Dmitry Medvedev and ambassador to Poland Alexander Alekseyev


December 06, 2010 (KATAKAMI / RIA NOVOSTI) — Russian President Dmitry Medvedev arrived on Monday in the Polish capital of Warsaw for potentially groundbreaking state visit.

Medvedev will discuss bilateral ties, including Russian-Polish energy cooperation, as well as European security issues with Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski and Prime Minister Donald Tusk.
On Tuesday, Medvedev will visit the Soviet War Memorial in Warsaw before leaving for a Russia-EU summit in Brussels.

Medvedev’s spouse Svetlana will also meet with the Polish first lady, Anna Komorowska.
The top-level talks in Poland are expected to be “very positive,” Medvedev’s aide Sergei Prikhodko told journalists.

“The sides intend to strengthen current positive trends in bilateral relations and create conditions for the improvement of Russian-Polish ties in all spheres,” Prikhodko said.

Ties between Russia and Poland, which had been hampered for decades over a range of historical disputes, have improved since the two sides were drawn together in grief after the April 10 plane crash in western Russia that killed Polish President Lech Kaczynski.

During the talks, the two presidents are expected to seal several deals, including an agreement on the fight against pollution in the Baltic Sea and on cooperation between the Russian and Polish prosecutor’s offices. Agreements on energy, trade and investment cooperation are also on the agenda.

Medvedev and Komorowski will also give their assessment of the probe into April’s tragedy, which occurred when the Polish presidential plane hit trees while landing in thick fog near the western Russian city of Smolensk. Besides Kaczynski, the crash claimed the lives of 95 Polish dignitaries, including the president’s wife, who were on their way to a memorial ceremony in honor of thousands of Polish officers killed by Soviet secret police in Katyn near Smolensk.

The State Duma, the lower house of Russia’s parliament, in late November recognized the 1940 massacre as a crime committed by Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin’s regime. Poland welcomed the move.

Prikhodko said the Polish-Russian dialogue should be based on a “constructive approach,” adding that “controversial pages of our common past should not be negatively reflected in the present and the future of out relations, and even less should they hamper them.”

Ahead of Medvedev’s visit to Poland, Komorowski promised to take steps to speed up rapprochement between the two countries.

“The process of rapprochement and reconciliation of our countries has started, and I, as the Polish president, will contribute to this,” the Polish president said in an interview with RIA Novosti.   (*)
WARSAW, December 6

Photostream : Turkish President Abdullah Gul meets Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas



Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, left, and Turkish President Abdullah Gul pose for media cameras before their meeting at the Cankaya Palace in Ankara, Turkey, Monday, Dec. 6, 2010. Abbas is in Turkey for a one-day working visit.(AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici)

urkey's President Abdullah Gul (R) welcomes Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas at the entrance of the Presidential Palace in Ankara December 6, 2010. REUTERS/Umit Bektas

Turkish President Abdullah Gul (R) welcomes his Palestinian counterpart Mahmoud Abbas (L) at the entrance of the Presidential Palace in Ankara on December 6, 2010. Mahmud Abbas arrived in Turkey yesterday for a two-day visit to discuss troubled efforts to end the Middle East conflict. AFP PHOTO / ADEM ALTAN (Photo credit should read ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Images)

Turkish President Abdullah Gul (R) welcomes his Palestinian counterpart Mahmoud Abbas (L) at the entrance of the Presidential Palace in Ankara on December 6, 2010. Mahmud Abbas arrived in Turkey yesterday for a two-day visit to discuss troubled efforts to end the Middle East conflict. AFP PHOTO / ADEM ALTAN (Photo credit should read ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Images)

PM Benjamin Netanyahu orders immediate compensation of fire victims

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu inspects the load of the Evergreen 747 supertanker, the world's largest aerial firefighting plan, at Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv, on December 5, 2010 in Israel. At least 41 people have been killed and more than 17,000 residents evacuated as northern Israel faces the country's worst ever forest blaze. (Photo by Guy Assayag - Pool/Getty Images


PM Benjamin Netanyahu Netanyahu awards $690 to each home while Yishai accuses Treasury of evading responsibility.


December 06, 2010 (KATAKAMI / YNET) --- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Monday with director-generals of various government ministries to discuss the compensation to be awarded to those whose property was damaged by the blaze that ravaged the Carmel forest this weekend.

Netanyahu ordered the Finance Ministry to award an immediate sum of NIS 2,500 ($690) to the owners of each home that sustained damage in order to facilitate the purchase of necessities such as clothing and school supplies.

The allowance is intended to assist with immediate needs, and Netanyahu's office has stressed that it will only be given to people who cannot return home within the coming month.

The prime minister also ordered the director-generals to acquaint themselves with the reality on the ground in order to provide quick solutions and "shorten the bureaucracy" homeowners may otherwise run into in attempting to secure the compensation they deserve.

"We have three missions," Netanyahu said. "To return home those evacuated from the fire area and take care of those harmed, rebuild homes that were destroyed and reconstruct infrastructure, and rehabilitate the Carmel. Two of these missions are immediate."

Comparing the evacuees to those removed from Gush Katif during the Gaza withdrawal, he said that in this case "our treatment must be different".

Interior Minister Eli Yishai also discussed "shortening bureaucracy" during a visit to the Druze town of Usfiya, which was greatly harmed by the fire. Yishai answered the residents' fears that they would not receive compensation from the state anytime soon.

"I will personally take charge of this battle with the Finance Ministry in order to shorten the bureaucracy on the way to rehabilitating the village," Yishai said.The minister also addressed the issue of his personal responsibility for firefighting in Israel, as the minister in charge of supervising firefighting in Israel.

Answering questions of whether he would resign, he said it was not the people demanding his resignation but rather the press "lynching" him.

He then accused the Finance Ministry of stalling funds meant for firefighters. "Unfortunately we live in a country in which Treasury personnel are free of responsibility while responsible public officials lack authority," he said.


Moment of silence at Knesset


Meanwhile, the Knesset held a special hearing on the fire and its consequences, which opened with a moment of silence for its 42 casualties. "Those who died battling the horrible blaze are 42 fallen soldiers in Israel's wars," said Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin.

A number of MKs called for the resignation of Eli Yishai. "This fire exposed failures of Israel's governments throughout the generations, but the prime minister and other ministers must not be allowed to wash their hands of this. This disaster happened on their watch," said MK Ze'ev Boim (Kadima).

MK Nitzan Horowitz (Meretz) called on Yishai to resign, and for the establishment of an investigation committee.

MK Anastassia Michaeli (Yisrael Beiteinu) spoke of the allegations of arson. "I belong to a party that believes loyalty to the state is a condition for citizenship. Anyone who engages in arson maliciously cannot be said to be loyal, and in any other country citizenship would be revoked from such a person and he would be charged with treason and attempted murder," she said.  (*)

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s Interview to Polish Mass Media


President Medvedev's interview to Polish Media

December 06, 2010 (KATAKAMI / KREMLIN.RU) — TOMASZ LIS:Good evening, Mr President. It’s very good to see you.
The relations between Russia and Poland can be best characterized by the fact that this is already the second bilateral Russian-Polish visit lately. The situation looks similar to that in the American-Polish relations when it seemed that a button was pressed, bringing about the improvement in relations. My question is as follows: what do you think about the quality of the relations between our countries as of today? And why did Russia’s leaders take the decision to press this relations-improving reset button?
PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, we would have had to take this decision, earlier or later. As it has been stressed more than once, both in various writings, in media, as well as at the political level, our relations have their own, rather complicated, history that binds our two peoples. This history has both bright pages, and pages of pain and distress. But now it is essential that we leave behind this long-standing, trite historical paradigm of the development of Russian-Polish relations, and try to separate history, whichever it be, from today’s life; otherwise we will forever remain captives of things that had been done before us, and for which the current generation of politicians (as well as the populations of Russia and Poland in general) cannot stand responsible. And yet, we should not forget the lessons taught by history. We should remember the events of the past. The most difficult task is to establish a good balance between holding our history in respect and drawing conclusions from it on the one hand, and avoiding being its captives, on the other. That is why, perhaps, we have been unfortunately failing to achieve this balance until lately.
We need to pave the way for the future while preserving, of course, all the best that has bound our countries, our peoples, and searching to give an adequate evaluation to the most severe moments of this history.
I am very glad that we have approached, though only in the recent months, the point, which will enable us to rise to a new level, find a new formula of relations between Russia and Poland. I would not like to use such terms as the “reset,” which has gone a bit hackneyed of late. We don’t really need to reset anything. We need to pave the way for the future while preserving, of course, all the best that has bound our countries, our peoples, and searching to give an adequate evaluation to the most severe moments of this history. If we succeed in this, the Russian-Polish relations will see a bright future. They will develop smoothly. And I believe that it serves the interests of our countries and peoples.
THOMASZ LIS: Mr. President, I think that the point you have mentioned – the one about our not remaining captives of history either in Russia or Poland, is a very important statement on the part of Russia with respect to its relations with the West, on the one hand, with Poland, on the other hand, and with the European Union.
Let us recall the last NATO-Russia summit. Your statement on the issue of the Stalin-era crimes was well received in Poland, as well as the last State Duma’s statement on the Katyn crime. However, due to the level of mistrust that has been growing, the millions of Poles ask themselves, whether the changes that we are facing now are the strategic, the permanent ones or whether these are only tactical and instantaneous changes.
How could you comment on this situation? What would you say to the Poles who want to believe in these positive changes?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know I am ready to say this to the Poles who want to believe in positive changes and also to all citizens of our country, because if we want the changes to come we do it not only for the Polish people, but also for the Russian citizens. This is a two-way-road.
So, I would only like to say that today we can make such decisions that will clear logjams of the past and give us an opportunity to develop our relations in a completely different way. It is up to us and in fact it should be a strategic choice and not a tactical decision aimed at achieving some goals.
Do you know what I consider to be the problem in Polish-Russian relations and in some aspects of relations of our country with others? The whole set of historical problems and tragedies. One of them (a really terrible tragedy) is the Katyn tragedy. The whole generation was raised who probably does not know too much about this tragedy. I think that our task in the Russian Federation is to tell the truth about it. I had to provide certain assessments. And I can tell you outright that many people in our country agree with these assessments, though some of them do not.
Yesterday, the State Duma adopted a statement on this issue, a very important statement. All this reflects the changes in public opinion. Still, I believe that such changes should take place not only in Russia. In order to move our relations to a new, partnership, future-oriented and strategic level, the public opinion in Poland should also change and the new vision of the new Russia should appear. Only in this case we will be able to bring the positions of social groups, politicians and other social forces together, so that contradictions of the past will considerably grow less. And then those changes that are taking place will actually become serious, strategic changes and not just a condition for reaching the goals.
As for my position, it is extremely simple. It is not necessary to consider our relations in a dimension of current considerations. My priorities in the sphere of foreign policy do not include the achievement of some goals for some today’s ends. And it has nothing to do with Poland for sure. First, in my opinion we have really complicated history.
And second, I think that we can really change the future of our relations, having a goodwill and confidence from both sides.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President, your position on the Katyn crime is absolutely clear. However another position on the Katyn crime on behalf of the Government of the Russian Federation has been recently submitted to Strasbourg [Tribunal for Human Right]. It was referring to some unknown criminals. I wonder why there is such a difference between your clear stand and this statement.
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Frankly, I do not quite understand what position you are talking about, what the position is like and who expressed it? As for the political assessments, I have provided them all, and you know them well. I spoke about them in the Russian Federation. I spoke about them while answering to journalists’ questions when I visited your country in the days of sadness. It is absolutely obvious who committed this crime and why. Yesterday the State Duma raised this issue once again. Stalin and his henchmen are responsible for this crime. I have relevant documents from the so-called “top-secret folder”. These documents can be found on the Internet and are available to the public with all he resolutions. The attempts to call these documents into question and to say that they had been falsified are nonsense. It is done by those who try to whitewash the nature of the regime established by Stalin in our country in a certain period of time.
As regards the formal position, the Russian side has never expressed any other formal positions. Therefore, if you speak about some assessments you just have to follow specific statements on specific cases. What are we talking about? Are we talking about those who made the political decision or those who implemented this decision, these are different issues.
Go ahead.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President, I would like to know your sentiment as President and as a human being. What did you feel and how did you react as President and as a human being when you learned that the Polish President died in a plane crash on April 10, 2010?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Well, I will never forget these minutes. When I heard about the accident (I was in St Petersburg at that time) and when it was reported to me I just could not believe that it might be actually true. First, I thought that there was a mistake. Then after getting several official reports I realized that the accident really happened – it is a terrible tragedy. As President and as a Russian citizen I mourned the death of a great number of people. The death of people is always a tragedy. This tragedy was even more grave and symbolic. The plane crushed in a place of sorrow. Frankly, all these factors certainly created a very heavy atmosphere around this tragedy.
Therefore, the first task of the Russian Federation at that time was to demonstrate to our Polish counterparts that we mourn with them and all Polish people. The second one was to say that we are ready to fully cooperate in the investigation of the circumstances of the tragedy, since I knew there will be people who would make the most odd and paradoxical assumptions. It was very important to express our willingness to thoroughly investigate the issue and find out all the circumstances.
You know, it was a very painful day not only for the Polish people, which is perfectly natural, or all those who lost their relatives in this dreadful accident, but also for our country and leadership of our state. It was a trial. Honestly, these moments, these feelings will stay in my memory forever.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President, I believe that I am speaking for a million of Polish people saying that the sympathy and mourning expressed those days by you and millions of Russian people were perceived and appreciated with great respect. As you said it yourself, everyone in Poland would like to have the whole accident cleared up. By the way, in Poland there have been some speculations that it might have been a plot. And those pushing that idea forward are not very enthusiastic about certain developments of the investigation. For instance, the Russian authorities deny the Polish access to the information on mandatory procedures applied in Smolensk Airport. It may be, I have no idea. Certainly, it is just a mere detail but it still creates some mistrust.
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I have my own view on how we proceed with our cooperation on the accident. I believe this kind of cooperation has pushed our relations forward very much. Indeed, it is a moment of great sorrow, a painful moment that led to this cooperation. But nevertheless it helped to demonstrate Russia’s good intentions.
As I said when that had happened, I naturally had a thought that we should clarify the situation as much as possible to erase every doubt, even the one of victims’ relatives or, say, people who were not very fond of Russia. It should be crystal-clear for everybody in Poland. And, in my view, the cooperation in the field is at unprecedented high level anyway. It includes cooperation between law enforcement agencies, prosecution departments, our aviation authorities, and cooperation within the Interstate Aviation Committee. Although we have had some technical difficulties – and they usually do exist – which could be interpreted differently by the sides, we have seen no significant contradictions. Certainly, efforts of different authorities could be interpreted differently depending on the circumstances. But I would like to reiterate that our specialist got all the necessary instructions. It does not mean that some minor mistakes are not possible. And if so, we should work together in a friendly way to address them.
When it happened – if we look back – I remember that after coming back to Moscow from St Petersburg I called Marshal of the Sejm, Mr Komorowski, today’s Polish President, and said that we mourned with the Polish people and were ready to take any efforts to conduct investigation. Naturally, the investigation of such accident is traditionally pursued at two levels, i.e. in Russia where the accident or tragedy occurred and at the international level within the efforts of the Interstate Aviation Committee. In my view, both of them are progressing normally.
The Interstate Aviation Committee has already made its conclusions. And I think all of them should be brought to the attention of all the parties concerned. Those conclusions should be made public to the last detail: events and their timing, records of the air crew communications with flight dispatch centre and flight operation officers, decisions made and what influenced the decision-making. There are plenty of interpretations of it as well. Some of them, to be frank, are rather frustrating. Surely, I am not making comment on any of those interpretations. First, I am not conducting the investigation, and second I have no moral right to do this now.
However, we must build up the complete picture of the accident with all the conclusions for the Polish people and the Russians as well, and create conditions necessary for this. In my view, in this respect the Russian side has already done its part of the way. And frankly speaking, there was not a single case when someone would call me and ask: “We have no instructions whether to provide this piece to the Poles or not.” From the very beginning, it has been stated that all the materials are to be provided to the Polish side, first, for the reason that the Polish people lost their President and most of their elite, which is a national tragedy. Second, if we hold back a mere piece, it will be the source of tension in our relations for decades. In this respect, I reiterate we have done all that has been needed.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President, both the West and the East perceived the Lisbon summit, in which you participated, as a crucial turning point in relations between Russia and NATO, as well as between Russia and the West. Do you consider it a milestone meeting or do you believe that in the long run it might turn out not to be quite so?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: It is all in our own hands. This summit can be historic, and so it actually was in terms of spirit and atmosphere, especially given the situation we were facing two years ago. Yet it could turn out to be a meeting that did not live up to the expectations.
We succeeded in resetting (as it is common to say although, and I am repeating it, the use of this term has become a bit tedious) relations between Russia and NATO. Earlier we did the same for our relations with America. We have established cooperation in addressing some current challenges, such as the Afghanistan issue, anti-drugs fight, terrorism, threat to maritime security (piracy in other words), fight against proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. However, apart from these problems there exist some issues that can unite us even more. One of them is missile defence system in Europe.
I would like to recall the developments of the year 2008. The previous US Administration suggested a well-known idea of deploying missile-defence interceptors and radars in Poland and the Czech Republic, which was a much-debated issue. In our country this idea was perceived as an idea aimed at weakening military capabilities of the Russian Federation: according to our experts the third positioning area was created to respond to launches from the Russian territory and not with regard to some other countries that pose threat to NATO.
We have brought our position to the attention of NATO. At some point the situation became so serious that I had to take an unpleasant decision to deploy additional missiles. Consequently, the new [US] Administration abandoned its decision, which was the right thing to do.
The idea of an ABM system has been preserved though. It was proposed to us to consider the place the Russian Federation occupies in the European ABM system, which is being created on the basis of NATO’s capabilities, primarily those of the United States of America. I told President Obama: “Right, OK. We are ready. But we want such project to be equal so that we could understand the place of the Russian Federation, the threats that are jointly addressed, the nature of these threats, the responsibility we assume.”
You know, I am going to say something, which I hope will not offend our friends and my US counterpart. I told President Obama frankly that the foundation we were building would be of greater importance for the situation that all of us would face in 10 years when the four-stage missile defence system would have been finally set up by 2020, and not for me and for him as politicians. Thus, this will be either a joint Russia-NATO initiative that will shield us from some potential threats, or, in case Russia fails to find its place in the system, by 2020 the situation can develop in such a way that the corresponding missile defence “umbrella” will be considered to be an element destabilizing nuclear equilibrium and weakening Russia’s capabilities of ensuring nuclear parity as long as nuclear weapons exist. The second course of events might cause by 2020 another cycle of arms race. And we would really loathe this. This is why at the Lisbon summit I voiced the idea of sectoral responsibility of states within missile defence in Europe. And I expect my partners, the USA as well as other partners within NATO, to study thoroughly the idea of the Russian Federation.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President noted a change in the US position on the ABM defence issue, which is true, but Russia too has radically changed its stance in this regard: as recently as 10 months ago the Kremlin made a statement describing NATO as a principal threat. What are the causes of these changes?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, as regards our defence doctrine, this citation is not correct. Our defence doctrine does not say that NATO represents a principal threat. It says something different, namely that an uncontrolled NATO expansion could lead to destabilisation of the international situation. You should admit that this is not the same, these are absolutely different things. Therefore, we believe that Russia and NATO can have normal, partner, good-hearted relations. We already maintain good relations in various dimensions. If we come to agreement on the ABM defence this would mark a breakthrough in our relations for the future. I would like to reiterate that I have great hopes in this respect.
As for the position of NATO itself it should be noted that the strategic concept adopted in Lisbon also states that NATO does not threaten Russia, which, too, represents a shift in the paradigm of our relations.
Certain developments, and you are right in this regard, take place very rapidly but this does not mean that we should not benefit from favourable changes. When we see that changes have accumulated to bring about a jump-like progress in these relations it would be a fault not to take advantage of the situation so that in 2020 we would not feel shame for what has been done earlier.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President, Prime Minister Putin declared a desire to create a special zone in Vladivostok.
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Not a special zone. This is an incorrect translation, I believe. You are re-referring to an economic space from Vancouver to Vladivostok. Am I right?
TOMASZ LIS: Yes, you are. And it is natural, that this was done in Berlin because the German position in this respect is very positive and interested. In the context of this new space, what is your vision of economic relations between Russia and Poland since the Nord Stream project has been considered to be political rather than economic?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I am looking back to the beginning of the 1990s. I was a young lawyer at that time. Russia and Poland have gone through transformation of their social organisation and economic structure. Polish businessmen, not with large businesses as a rule, came to St Petersburg from time to time in order to develop relations with Russia. I remember the mini-lectures I gave to these business people on Russian legislation, primarily civil and commercial, within the framework of the St Petersburg Chamber of Commerce. At that time, I believed that our economic relations would be bright. But the developments over the past decades have proved not to be as easy as that. And in respect of our economic relations, for example, we have much to do in this field, even if we set aside politics, normalisation of relations between the two states in general, and their future development.
In order to make such relations full-fledged and meaningful, alongside with relations with small and medium businesses, major projects are very important. This is of great significance, too. What are these major projects? They include also power projects.
You know, one could certainly describe the Nord Stream as political project. But if the diversification of energy supplies in Europe and guaranteed supply of energy resources from Russia means policy, then this project is a political one. However I believe that in this case we act on the basis of mutual interest. Russia is interested in selling its gas and selling it to as many consumers as possible. European countries are interested in getting and processing respective energy resources including gas as well, to heat houses, launch new projects and enterprises. There is no special politics here because this is mutually beneficial. But there is policy here since this is a major project requiring political consent of many states. It is only natural that the Nord Stream gas-pipe line project was declared a Trans-European, special and priority project. And in my relations with European leaders I proceed exactly from this assumption.
Our task, the task of the Russian Federation, is to shape, on the basis of this project, a new economic environment for relations between our countries, for relations between Russia and the European Union. I would like to recall that the European Union is our major partner. Our trade turnover exceeds 200 billion euros a year and will undoubtedly grow. We are very important partners. But our partnership is based on a whole number of projects. Therefore, certain efforts to describe the Nord Stream or South Stream as Moscow’s attempt to make Europe dependent on Russia’s energy look like an unfair and a completely unjustified manipulation. Finally, these are mutually beneficial and in my view absolutely depoliticised things.
TOMASZ LIS: In Europe and Poland they see your presidency in Russia as a serious modernisation endeavour too. This modernisation can become a reality if Russia consistently builds a state of law and respects civil liberties. What do you think is the most important, what is absolutely necessary for the civil society creation in Russia?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I am deeply convinced that democracy is closely connected with the economic situation. And if we want Russia to become a modern democracy – I mentioned many times that we have just started to create fundamentals of democratic mechanisms in our country – we have to have a modern, strong, streamlined economy, based not on oil and gas only, while they are very important elements of our economic well-being. Our economy should be based on innovations, new technologies. Fortunately, we have all that is necessary for that – we have abilities, we have the desire to do that.
At the same time to create a modern economy we need to have in our country a modern political mechanism ensuring, securing the fundamental rights and freedoms. That is why the process of modern economy, efficient economy creation as we like to name it, and the process of efficient state creation based on the rule of law are tightly linked processes.
I have just mentioned that the democracy cannot be built in a poor state, I am absolutely sure of that. But at the same time it is impossible to create a modern developed economy in a dictatorship environment, whatever you may sometimes hear in this connection. From time to time I hear advices: “It is better not to do anything, the economic situation needs to be changed completely and only afterwards one should improve political institutions and ensure the freedoms.” It is wrong. We cannot reform our economy without changes in the political system. For some countries it can be considered as a possible way, but not for Russia. Why? Because a significant portion of our society, of our people identify themselves with Europe, with values which came to us from Europe – religious, moral, and political values. That is why both these dimensions – building a modern developed economy and a developed political system – should be synchronized. How to achieve that? It is a special and very challenging task. That is what we are doing now.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President, I have a tough question to ask. It is a litmus test for the Western countries to know where Russia is now in the process of building a rule-of-law state. This question stirs a lot of thoughts. We cannot talk of economic crimes alone.
Do you believe it is possible to address common law crimes alone or economic crimes as well, to develop economy and fight economic crimes at the same time?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: The translation is not very good. I sort of have the very basic idea, so I will try to give an answer.
Where are we now in the process of building a rule-of-law state? I have no illusions about that. We are still at an early stage of this process. We are not the only country, however, which faces challenges in building a modern rule‑of‑law state.
I have repeatedly explained my views regarding the main challenges in turning our country into a rule-of-law state. Today’s economic or political realities are by no means the only problem we are facing; we should not overlook our own history, the so-called legal nihilism that was largely present in our state a century or even two centuries ago. It is true that we have had no democratic tradition at all.
Democracies cannot be built in a few years. Our country enjoyed no democracy until 1991, when the modern Russian state came into being. No democracy, I stress, – either in the tsarist Russia or in the Soviet Union. This is a difficult process.
I would put it straight: for various reasons, the democratisation process runs more smoothly in smaller countries; smaller in terms of size and territory. And it is much more difficult in countries like Russia. So I have no illusions about the lengthy way ahead of us. This does not mean, however, that we have done nothing during the past twenty years or ten years in particular. In my view, we have considerably strengthened both our government system and our legal system. I hear sometimes, “You have overblown your government, it has become very rigid and cumbersome, and it is in charge of everything.” This may be the case in some aspects, and I will not contest this opinion. On the other hand, however, the rule of law is impossible unless the law has its foundation in government.
From a lawyer’s point of view, any legal system is supposed to function through government institutions. However, if these institutions are in a state of collapse, which was the case in Russia in the 1990s, no rule of law is possible. A weak state means a weak system of law. This should be kept in mind especially dealing with such enormously big country as Russia.
Speaking of criminality, crimes may be of various kinds both in Russia and in other countries, the European Union or Poland. There are other crimes that are not economically motivated; there are politically driven crimes or crimes motivated by extremism. I think no one will question that certain crimes are committed in order to achieve political goals and not some personal profit. In fact, attempts to portray all crimes as purely economic ones or political ones are doomed to failure.
I will recall that in the times of Stalin, any economic crime, most of which were actually fabricated, was treated as a political crime, as an offence against the Soviet public order. In fact, the same was true for Poland at a certain period of time. Any bribe, any other illegal act or any theft was considered to be a political crime against the state. This must not be the case; you have to take other criminal assaults into account as well.
We have a lot of problems, and everyone is aware of them. We witness a rather complex situation in the Caucasus; not only economic crimes but also infringements on life and health of people take place there, motivated by extremist, not domestic, reasons, whereby people’s life and health fall victim to certain religious or pseudo-religious political attitudes. You cannot turn a blind eye to this. I would like the Russian Federation, our Polish friends and members of the European Union to apply uniform approaches to the above-mentioned situation.
It is encouraging to see that our voice has become louder in the recent times. Let us be honest: a mere eight years ago we were told that those who we dealt with in the Caucasus were actually rebels, guerrillas fighting for their independence. After 9-11 and other incidents, our US and European partners acknowledged, however, that those people were terrorists receiving money from Al Qaeda and other terrorist organisations. It has taken some time to arrive at that point. I think that we have to heed each other’s opinions in this regard; this is highly important for Russian-European relations in general and Russian‑Polish relations in particular.
TOMASZ LIS: Mr President, I would like to put a question, even if I am not so optimistic to expect that you will answer it. Do you intend to pursue a second presidential term?
DMITRY MEDVEDEV: There is no way for me to avoid your question. Still, I suppose you are not so optimistic to expect to hear from me that I intend to announce today my candidacy for president as far as the election process has not been launched yet.
I repeat what I have already said: if the situation in this country is normal and stable, if I enjoy an appropriate support from people, I do not exclude this possibility. However, such things are not divulged in advance even for so-called superstition reasons that people refer to sometimes, not to mention political practice considerations. This is to be done at an appropriate time, when it has to be done. Some of my colleagues could also take part in this political process. Therefore, I believe that the most important thing is to preserve in any circumstances the continuity of power and policy. As for me, I do not naturally exclude such a job– it is a normal thing for any politician.
Now let me say another thing. I am looking forward to visiting Poland. It is a long-awaited visit for me. Firstly, because President of Russia has not visited Poland for a very long time. Secondly, many new things have emerged in our bilateral relations. We have gone through hard times; there was a tragedy near Smolensk. At the same time, we witnessed some positive developments. And now, an unprecedented intensity of our consultations, openness in our dialogue and assessments we have made, all this, I believe, create quite a good background for the visit to be a success.
I expect that my colleague, President Komorowski, has the same understanding. Our personal relations are good enough and quite constructive; we met many times and discussed various subjects. Therefore, I would like my visit to transform these quantitative, small but important changes in Russia‑Poland relations into qualitative ones. Anyway, from my part I will do everything necessary for that.
Thank you.
TOMASZ LIS: Thank you very much indeed, Mr President, and I thank you as well for answering some thorny questions and making time to meet with us.

(END)