http://www.themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/383915.html

Today Putin, Tomorrow a Prison Toilet 
23 September 2009
By Yulia Latynina
There is a rather wealthy fellow named Andrei Boiko who co-owns the Burevestnik 
Yacht Club on the Moscow River. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin recently paid a 
visit to the club. Boiko couldn't have been happier. He showed the prime 
minister around, saying, "This is mine, and that over there is mine, too." A 
week later, Boiko was in jail. 

Maybe Putin didn't like the club members' opulent lifestyle during the economic 
crisis. Or maybe someone in Putin's retinue has his eye on Boiko's business. 
Either way, it is a decidedly bad sign when someone lands in jail just seven 
days after receiving the prime minister as a guest. 

A couple of months ago, a kebab house called Anti-Sovietskaya opened up in 
Moscow. There was nothing so unusual about the name. It just happens to be 
located opposite the Sovietskaya Hotel, and so that spot - a virtual cult 
hangout for writers in the 1970s - came to be called the Anti-Sovietskaya. 
Unfortunately for the restaurant's owners, however, the new district prefect, 
Oleg Mitvol, heard about the kebab house with the unpatriotic name. He sent his 
men over with orders to, "Pull down that sign by 6 o'clock this evening."

It is just such little pleasantries that make up daily life in Russia. Today 
you're sitting next to the prime minister, and tomorrow you're sitting next to 
a prison toilet. Today you buy a swanky restaurant and turn it into an 
affordable kebab house, and tomorrow you've got Oleg Mitvol and his minions 
breathing down your neck.

At the same time, we've got President Dmitry Medvedev trying to correct the 
situation with his article "Go, Russia!" and the suggestion that the government 
consider a proposal by a blogger named Maxim Kalashnikov to build a prototype 
city of the future. Kalashnikov is not alone - I can also make a few 
recommendations to the president on ways to improve conditions in Russia. For 
example, he could use a fortuneteller to tweak the future and an astrologist to 
clear the channel between his body and his mind. Or I could toss the president 
the phone numbers of a couple of people who could put him in direct 
communication with the star Sirius on any cloudless night of his choosing.

Clever political analysts hurried to interpret the president's article to mean 
that a rift had formed between Putin and Medvedev. Forget it. How could there 
be a rift between the one man who holds all the power in this country firmly in 
his grasp and his obedient sidekick who never had any power to begin with?

I think Medvedev's article, like the blogger Kalashnikov's pipe dream, is the 
symptom of a completely different illness - the complete and total paralysis of 
authority in Russia.

Russia has become completely ungovernable. Imagine if Medvedev wanted to issue 
a weighty command - and not even something really serious like freeing jailed 
former Yukos CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky or firing Putin. Consider what would 
happen if the government decided to reduce customs duties. The smugglers would 
make sure that the law never passed. Or what would happen if Medvedev decided 
to oust Mayor Yury Luzhkov? The wheels of government would grind to a halt for 
a full year. If it took Medvedev four months to name a replacement for the 
Moscow police chief, imagine how long it would take to find someone to replace 
Luzhkov.

And when the mechanism of government has stopped working, leaders are forced to 
busy themselves with the semblance of activity: writing inspirational articles, 
considering proposals by unknown bloggers and renaming harmless restaurants.

Yulia Latynina hosts a political talk show on Ekho Moskvy radio.

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