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  • Kasparov Pins Hopes on Obama

    Kasparov Pins Hopes on Obama

    The Moscow Times
    Issue 4181 / News
    06 July 2009

    Reuters -- U.S. President Barack Obama's decision to meet Kremlin
    critics while visiting Russia shows that Washington is no longer
    willing to ignore democracy and human rights to cut deals with Moscow,
    opposition leader Garry Kasparov said.

    Obama will meet representatives of nongovernmental organizations
    during his trip to Moscow, and he will also see opposition figures
    including Kasparov, a former chess champion who has become one of the
    Kremlin's harshest critics.

    `I think the fact of the meeting is more important than anything
    else,' Kasparov said in an interview Friday.

    `It sends a signal the [U.S.] administration is probably ready to end
    this application of double standards which has been used for Putin's
    Russia by foreign leaders for many years,' Kasparov said.

    Kremlin critics say Western leaders have at times toned down criticism
    of Russia's human rights violations, its poor record on democracy and
    its government-dominated media landscape to pursue lucrative business
    deals and win Moscow's cooperation.

    `What we always wanted is for America and other Western countries not
    to support Putin's regime by pretending that Putin's regime was
    democratic,' Kasparov said.

    Kasparov heads The Other Russia movement, which relies mainly on
    street protests ' often broken up by police ' and online campaigning
    to get its message across. State-controlled media ignore him.

    Kasparov will meet Obama along with Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov
    and two other leaders of small pro-Western opposition parties ' Boris
    Nemtsov of Solidarity and Sergei Mitrokhin from Yabloko. Obama has no
    meeting scheduled with Boris Gryzlov, the parliamentary leader of the
    main pro-Kremlin party, United Russia.

    Kasparov predicted that the worsening economic crisis in Russia would
    lead to a change in power and that the opposition would gather more
    support.
    Russians were willing to live without democracy when the country was
    said. But they are becoming increasingly angry now that the country is
    mired in a deep recession.

    `Probably within the next 12 months, the political landscape will look
    very different. ¦ I think that eventually the regime will crunch
    under the pressure of civil protest,' he said, declining to describe
    specific political changes.


    http://www.moscowtimes.ru/article/1010/ 42/379299.htm
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