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Interview of President Medvedev with Novaya Gazeta

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  • Interview of President Medvedev with Novaya Gazeta

    Interview of President Medvedev with Novaya Gazeta

    April 13, 2009
    Published April 15, 2009

    http://www.girodivite.it/Interview-of-Presid ent-Medvedev.html
    Thursday 16 April 2009, by Emanuele G. - 4 letture

    NOVAYA GAZETA (EDITOR IN CHIEF DMITRY MURATOV): I wanted to start with
    general issues, but some are more urgent. It might be better to cancel
    the election in Sochi rather than to imitate it Imitation is more
    cynical than abolition. Candidate Lebedev was barred from the election
    by a court, and candidate Nemtsov is kept away from campaigning.
    PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I do not yet know who was
    expelled and how, but in any case a full-fledged political struggle is
    taking place in Sochi. It is good that different political forces are
    participating in it. In my opinion, many municipal elections suffer
    from monotony, a lack of interesting candidates, and as a result are
    uninteresting.
    It is true that people almost always vote for intelligible politicians
    rather than popular stars, but the more striking these events are the
    better it is for our electoral system, for democracy in Russia.
    Now regarding the specific circumstances: in every election there will
    always be candidates who lose, candidates that are taken off the
    ballot, and this is the case everywhere in the world.
    But in general I believe that such public campaigns are good for
    democracy.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: On April 15 you will host the Presidential Civil
    Society Institutions and Human Rights Council. I was glad to see that
    the members list includes intelligent and decent people. Alexander
    Auzan, Alexey Simonov, Svetlana Sorokina, Elena Panfilova, Igor
    Yurgens, Irina Yasina, and I have not listed them all. Do I understand
    that today civil society is more important to you then that of
    `plainclothes men'?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, civil society is a category that we have
    not fully absorbed in Russia. Throughout the world civil society is
    the flip side of the state. The state is not only a political machine,
    it is also a form of organising life in
    e that is based on state power and relies on the law, while civil
    society is the human dimension of any state. Though its members are
    governed by state legislation they often act according to human laws
    that, incidentally, do not always have a legal form. Still quite
    recently, many people did not understand the words civil society. A
    state is more or less clear. But what is civil society? A society of
    citizens? So we are all citizens of our country. And now there is the
    understanding that civil society is an integral non-governmental
    institution in any state. An institution that provides feedback. The
    organisations of people who do not hold office, but are nevertheless
    actively involved in the life of
    their country.
    Therefore meetings and contacts between the President and
    representatives of civil society are indispensable. Let me emphasise:
    these relations are not easy for any authority, because all members of
    civil society and representatives of human rights organisations have a
    huge number of issues to raise with the government and leaders. They
    have a lot of questions, and these are questions the authorities do
    not always want to answer. But that is why such contacts must be
    systematic, including contacts within the framework of the Council you
    mentioned. I expect that this will be an interesting conversation. It
    will likely be hard, but therein lies its value.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: For a few years now there has been an unspoken contract
    between state and society (or, more precisely, the majority of
    society): the state provides a given level of comfort and well-being,
    and in exchange society remains loyal to the state.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You mean `democracy in exchange for prosperity' or,
    say, `sausages in exchange for freedom'?
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Yes. But now, in the absence of prosperity, what do you
    think a new contract could be? I will not even say the word thaw, but
    perhaps the defrosting [Alexander Auzan's term] of society is
    pertinent? Since neither society nor the state can deal with the
    crisis alone, they will have to talk.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: The idea of a social contract is certainly one of the
    brightest human ideas and has undoubtedly played a very significant
    role in the development of democratic institutions throughout the
    world. The origins of Rousseau's idea are well-known, but if you refer
    to the modern social contract then I would say that its framework is
    laid out in our Constitution. The Constitution is a special agreement
    between on the one hand the state and, on the other, its citizens.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: An agreement on what?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: On how to exercise power in the territory of our
    state, of our country. In this context, the social contract refers to
    the partial assignment of autho
    ty, which by virtue of natural law belongs to the individual, to the
    state so that the state guarantees individual's prosperity, life and
    liberty. But it seems to me that one should never oppose a stable and
    prosperous life, and a set of political rights and freedoms. You can
    not oppose democracy and well-being. On the other hand, it is clear
    that the inalienable rights and freedoms of the individual and citizen
    may be in jeopardy if society is unstable, if the elementary needs of
    individuals are not provided for, if people do not feel secure, if
    they do not receive their wages, if they are unable to buy basic
    foodstuffs, if their lives are threatened.
    Therefore, I see no contradiction in your question to me. It is
    obvious that the social contract goes back not only to the well-known
    theories of the 17th and 18th centuries, but also to our Constitution.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Are you suggesting that you can offer Russia both
    freedom and prosperity?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Yes.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Today the primary function of society is, of course, to
    supervise public officials, to oversee the benefits and services that
    the bureaucracy provides for society. How do you think this control
    can be implemented? The entire country read the declarations of income
    and assets of your subordinates and those of the Prime Minister.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Probably everyone enjoyed reading this?
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Yes they did. Of course, it is unclear who will verify
    the authenticity of the declarations. In a few days a powerful
    community of `poor' husbands with wealthy wives has emerged in
    Russia¦
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, the problem of supervising public officials
    and civil servants is one of the fundamental tasks of any state. The
    state must control its officials ` officials who are actually serving
    the state, and of course there is a wide variety of control
    mechanisms.
    We started working on this a long time ago and I cannot say that we
    have achieved great success. Although if we're comparing, say, the
    situation in the 1990s and that of t
    nisms are associated with legal proceedings. And as a person with a
    legal way of thinking, I can say that legal procedures are very
    important. The role played by the rule of law in society at large,
    individuals' legal consciousness, and the degree of the very legal
    nihilism I have referred to more than once all depend on how these
    procedures are implemented. Therefore the procedures we have now are
    sufficient.
    Some time ago we changed the law on public service. Incidentally, I
    began working on this when I was still working in the Presidential
    Executive Office. We passed a very decent, modern law on the
    fundamental aspects of public service and laws on the various types of
    public service, and this work continues: there are many new chapters
    to this story. Just recently we adopted a package of anti-corruption
    laws and amendments to legislation on public service, including those
    governing the declaration of income and a number of other fairly
    important and useful things.
    In my opinion, today the main problem is not the absence of
    regulations on supervision, but rather their full implementation. This
    is, of course, the most difficult thing, because when the bureaucracy
    is told to supervise themselves this, of course, does not make them
    happy and I understand this. But we need to make sure that these
    procedures are nevertheless respected, despite the fact that nobody
    likes to limit oneself, nobody likes to restrict oneself within
    confining limits. A civilized society differs from a less civilized
    one precisely because it has learned to do this.
    With regards to the income declaration, this is only one of the
    institutions of control, an important but not exclusive one, of
    course. It is very good that for the first time in the history of the
    Russian state (this has never happened before: neither under the Tsar,
    the Soviet government, nor in the recent history), all senior
    officials must not simply declare ` in a tax declaration, for example
    ` their incomes and those of their immediate families, but also make
    this i
    e public.
    This practice should become a habit and should not cause an allergic
    reaction.
    You can, of course, ask me: does the publication of the declarations
    mean that we have control over all senior officers and other
    officials? Of course not. But at least it is the first step in the
    right direction. If a person declares his or her income each year `
    and for senior officials this is not just a declaration but, I repeat,
    the publication of these documents ` then at least this person should
    think about the assets acquired and the funds used to do so.
    While introducing the above practice, we should of course avoid
    demeaning human beings. I believe that our bureaucrats are Russian
    citizens who perform a very valuable mission.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: The same as other citizens of Russia?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Exactly the same as all the others.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Just with flashing lights on their cars.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Far from all of them. This is a common
    misconception. We have several million officials and public servants
    and the number of those entitled to such features is quite small. So
    both the income declaration and other forms of supervision establish a
    certain chain of events with the ultimate goal of compiling the
    history of a given individual.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: The credit history of an official?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: And why not? It is exactly the same person as
    others. You mentioned wives, for example. Firstly, I believe that any
    person can determine independently how to create a life for his
    family. There is nothing wrong with the fact that officials' wives are
    engaged in business. The question is whether or not this is
    transparent, and of course if there is a conflict of interest. If,
    say, an official is involved in regulating a given sector and his
    spouse works for a major company in that sector, this is
    unethical. But if she is involved in any other business there is no
    problem. And this is the case throughout the world. It is not taboo
    that officials' spouses are engaged in business. It is a question of
    measures and
    's personal culture. And measures such as the publication of income
    declarations of high-positioned officials and their close relatives
    should create such a culture.
    Maybe not right away.
    But I would repeat again that some history has been created, the
    history of an official and his family history as well.
    Incidentally, this can be unpleasant because people do not always want
    to have others discussing the income of their spouse, but this is part
    of the public persona of bureaucrats. Each person has a choice. One
    can stay in business absolutely legally and make money without any
    publicity, without publishing any such reports, as banking secrecy in
    Russia, as in any other country, is guaranteed.
    Or one may choose another path.
    One can become a public servant, an official, but in this case people
    ` especially when thinking about the future and how to structure their
    careers ` must understand that at some point in the future part of
    their private life must be revealed. This is a conscious choice, but
    whoever takes it must understand that it is inevitable and it may
    cause inconvenience to their family.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Were you personally affected by the negative reaction
    of public officials? Or did they react with understanding to your
    decision, the decision to publicize the declaration?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Well as you know, the office of President releases me
    from the obligation to listen to the negative reactions of officials.
    I took the decision and everyone must execute it.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Mr President, I would like to leave the so-called
    people's judgment, or `vox populi' issue where we discuss declarations
    of income and credit histories of officials, and switch to your
    favourite subject, the courts and their independence. I want to ask
    about the second Yukos case. Can you predict what the outcome of this
    case will be? For most of those interested in the first case, its
    outcome was, alas, all too predictable. But can we say the same thing
    this time? I received the following letter: perhaps, for at least some
    kos case and say: you're independent, you're independent, let me
    remind you that you're independent, independent, independent! Here is
    a hands-on way of encouraging the renewal of judicial culture ...
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I can assure you that every hands-on management
    technique comes with important drawbacks. I'm not even talking about
    the courts here. We just need to try and ensure that the state machine
    operates with a reasonable degree of consistency. Now, with respect to
    the court and the specific process. I can answer this very
    briefly. Maybe for some the outcome of a given case is
    predictable. This is the freedom, the pleasure of someone who does not
    have any public duties and is, let us suppose, a free-lance analyst
    who can say: I think this will happen. And then he can say: see, this
    is what happened. Or: sorry, I was wrong.
    But for a public servant, and even more so for the President, no such
    freedom exists and they can make no such comment.
    For the President, predictability of judicial decisions is illegal, it
    is a sign that the law is being violated. For all the other
    unconstrained commentators, this is a personal matter. No legal
    proceeding, including the one you mentioned, should be predicted by
    government officials or the President in any manner. This is the way
    it is and the way it should be.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: You have repeated almost exactly the remarkable words
    of the 18th century Emperor Friedrich (as cited by Merab
    Mamardashvili). When Friedrich wanted to take the mill away from the
    miller, the miller told him: `Your Majesty, besides you we have judges
    in our country...'. So the Emperor left the miller in peace and
    throughout his residence inscribed the words: `Your Majesty, besides
    you we have judges in our country...'. The miller was lucky, as apart
    from to the Emperor there were judges available for him.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: There are other maxims on this subject. For example,
    as Hume put it, all political systems exist only so that judges can
    perform their functions independently.
    NOV
    f charity, I would like to ask you something. There have been
    rumours¦ Are you thinking about becoming a member of one of the
    parties? Perhaps even the ruling party?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I spoke about this issue recently, at a meeting with
    United Russia, and said that in our country, we currently have a
    tradition of a `non-party president'. During a certain historical
    period, I feel that this is best, because our political system is not
    yet fully developed. It must develop, and it must become more
    mature. That does not mean we should simply cross out the idea of a
    party-aligned president and say that it is not possible in our
    country. In other countries, people who become presidents are often
    either members of a party or leaders of political movements. For now,
    this is not the case in our country. The question is, when will we be
    ready for it? This is a question of political experience, of political
    life.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: So after some time, reforms need to be made within the
    electoral system, in order to ensure real party competition?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I think that electoral legislation, legislation on
    elections, legislation on parties, and legislation on non-governmental
    organizations ` all this legislation is sufficiently flexible. In my
    view, it can and should be changed every so often. That is what
    happened and continues to happen in other countries. And in this
    country, this is an entirely normal process. I would act with much
    greater care in regard to, for example, changes to civil legislation
    that determines the property status of our citizens, the proprietary
    rights in our country, contractual institutions, and inheritance laws,
    because they are fundamental. The Napoleonic Code was adopted 200
    years ago, and it is all right, it is still working, despite the fact
    that it has quite a few anachronisms. But when any kind of changes are
    made, they should not put into question the fundamental basics of
    constitutional order.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: A few days ago (I am sure you saw this in the blogs)
    the Mothers of Bes
    y upset. Guardians and parents who survived the tragedy were asked to
    pay taxes for the education and living expenses of children attending
    the Koralovo school [a school created by Mikhail Khodorkovsky for
    orphans and children who, along with their parents, were victims of
    terrorist acts]. The government is not spending any money on this
    project, but wants to collect taxes.
    And this is not a unique occurrence. Whenever I, as an individual, put
    part of my money toward the medical expenses of a sick child, I know
    that parents will have to pay a 13 percent tax, just as they would on
    their income.
    Those who get this money from us, they have barely raked up a sum
    needed to pay for medical treatment of their child (there are lots of
    examples) and then, in tears, have to go and pay the tax.
    Perhaps it would make sense to change the laws on philanthropy?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: The laws on philanthropy need improvement. The
    problem, as usual, is in the details. There are very clear cases of
    charity, when help is provided for sick children or the elderly. There
    are less clear cases, when people are tempted to direct money through
    the appropriate channels to achieve certain business goals.
    We must learn (with the help of the law) to separate money that is
    intended for charity from money that is intended for business.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: And we must make it easier for people to do good
    deeds. For example: you see a picture of a sick child in a newspaper,
    with the phone number of a mobile telephone operator; you dial it, and
    your account is credited. The accessibility of philanthropy is
    absolute. But the telephone companies take an enormous cut for this
    service, and so it loses its purpose.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: That is a good idea. Everything must be done very
    quickly, and the accessibility of alms-deed must be equal for the rich
    and for the poor.
    Philanthropy is important on both a large scale (in order to stimulate
    it, we have passed a law on creating targeted capital foundations) and
    on a small scale which, by the way, is no less valuabl
    : for some reason, we may feel ashamed to take 100 roubles out of our
    pockets to send them to a foundation that helps sick children or
    supports the university where we studied. Why? Because we have
    doubts. What is 100 roubles? They'll think we are mocking them. But
    for some reason, in other countries, there is no shame in sending a
    dollar, just one, to your university or to the city council of your
    home town, because people feel that it is perfectly normal to do so,
    and that they must somehow help important social initiatives. I also
    think that it is right to do good deeds regardless of one's income,
    donating any sum of money.
    By the way, we already have an undertaking of this sort. Sberbank
    launched an interesting project. They began to issue special bank
    cards. If you get this kind of card, you agree in advance that a small
    percent of each of your expenses or purchases will go to charity [this
    project was undertaken jointly by Sberbank and the Chulpan Khamatova's
    `Give Life' Foundation].
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Social initiatives are important things, and
    oftentimes, they do not require large amounts of spending. Along with
    the Committee of Soliders' Mothers and a couple of military enlistment
    offices, we held an experiment: we gave mobile phones to conscripts,
    so that if anything happened, they could call the public prosecutor's
    office, or their mothers or girlfriends. It was reported to us that
    cases of hazing decreased sharply. For example, they can have a
    `Soldier' price plan in the beginning, and a `Demobee' price plan by
    the end of their service¦
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: That is a good idea. Crimes committed in the armed
    forces are dangerous, first and foremost, because of their latency,
    because only an insignificant percent reaches the military judges and
    investigators, and even less make it to the court. Whereas modern
    means of communication do help.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Not so long ago, we printed an article about the town
    of Maisky. Perhaps you heard this story, it is related to you. In the
    town of M
    rumour that Medvedev will visit soon, because Medvedev's grandmother
    lives somewhere in the town. And what did the authorities do, when
    they could not find the grandmother? Just in case, all of the roads in
    Maisky were paved. Tonnes of trash were taken out, the town square was
    paved, and street lamps were installed. The people were happy. I think
    that if we spread rumours about the grandmothers of Medvedev, Surkov,
    and members of the government in various towns, then perhaps the fear
    will cause local authorities to get active.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: This is not a bad method¦ I know what you are
    talking about. If I remember correctly, long ago, my grandfather
    worked as a secretary for the district [communist] party committee in
    Kabardino-Balkar Republic, right around Maisky. Although, that was
    long ago, over 60 years now, but nevertheless. Perhaps that is how
    this rumour got started¦
    NOVAYA GAZETA: The internet is one of the few remaining public
    platforms for discussion. Do you think about the fact that civil
    servants constantly try to introduce control over the Web?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I do not think that is the case. The internet is not
    merely one of many platforms for discussions; in my view, it is the
    best discussion platform, not just in our country, but overall,
    because I cannot think of anything else that is more socially
    significant, or more actively reaching every household, while
    simultaneously creating opportunities for direct communication, than
    the internet.
    I have stated my position on the internet many times, and I can say it
    again: we must create normal conditions for the development of the
    Web. As a person who is rather deeply immersed in the internet and
    uses it quite actively every day, I feel that we must have a normal
    legal foundation for its development in our country ` a legal
    foundation, and an organisational one. Because without organisational
    support, as I have said recently, the internet in our country will not
    develop.
    Not long ago, I was present at the launch of WiMAX technology [a tel
    hnology for many devices, ranging from computers to mobile phones,
    ensuring high-speed access to the Web of IEEE 802.16 standard] in
    Armenia and I was simply jealous of our Armenian friends, because they
    have a small country, and they covered everything at once ` absolutely
    everything. You can drive through the territory in a car and watch
    television: thanks to the internet, the signal is delivered at high
    speed.
    We have a different situation. We have an enormous country, and even
    providing internet to schools required enormous financial resources,
    great organisational resources, and special government attention. I
    worked on this personally. It is wonderful that we were nevertheless
    able to bring internet to all schools, and this way, it has begun to
    develop in smaller towns and villages which are far from out country's
    centre.
    As for legal regulation of the internet, it must be reasonable. We do
    not need to be ahead of everyone in the world, we must think about how
    to create a legal framework that, on the one hand, will allow the
    internet to develop, and on the other hand, will block crimes that can
    be committed using internet technologies. But under no circumstances
    should the internet be regarded as some sort of potentially dangerous
    criminal medium in regard to others. The internet is not an absolute
    evil.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: Our newspaper has quoted the words of the wonderful
    writer and analyst Dmitry Oreshkin: in the USSR, they could not create
    a computer, because even photocopiers were under the control of the
    KGB, so they would certainly not allow anyone to have a personal data
    processing device. But in order to modernise the country, we need a
    particular, free environment. Today you talked about elections, about
    control over bureaucracy, about the internet. Does this mean that
    President Medvedev is going to rehabilitate democracy in Russia?
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, I think that democracy as such does not
    need any kind of rehabilitation. Democracy is both historical and at
    the same time, supranational. T
    quire rehabilitation anywhere. There is another issue: at a certain
    point, the highly difficult political and economic processes of the
    1990s became associated with the arrival of the key democratic
    institutions in our country for many of our fellow citizens, and for
    them, this was a very difficult time. That is what left a mark on the
    perception of the term itself, but that is more a matter of personal
    experience, rather than an attitude toward democracy overall. That is
    why I do not think that we need to rehabilitate democracy. Democracy
    was, is, and will be.
    NOVAYA GAZETA: A few days ago, I watched Andrei Khrzhanovsky's film
    about Joseph Brodsky, and it contained his wonderful phrase: `It is
    always much easier to organise inhumanity in our country than anything
    else.' Inhumanity is, indeed, always easier, whereas justice and
    freedom are always much more difficult. I wish you the best of luck on
    your difficult path.
    DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Thank you. I cannot disagree with this; it truly is
    more difficult¦
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