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Kremlin Power Grab Troubling, Rice Says

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  • Kremlin Power Grab Troubling, Rice Says

    KREMLIN POWER GRAB TROUBLING, RICE SAYS
    By Matthew Lee

    Washington Times, DC
    Oct 15 2007

    MOSCOW (AP) - The Russian government under Vladimir Putin has amassed
    so much central authority that the power grab may undermine Moscow's
    commitment to democracy, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said
    yesterday.

    "In any country, if you don't have countervailing institutions, the
    power of any one president is problematic for democratic development,"
    Miss Rice told reporters after meeting with human rights activists.

    "I think there is too much concentration of power in the Kremlin. I
    have told the Russians that. Everybody has doubts about the full
    independence of the judiciary. There are clearly questions about
    the independence of the electronic media and there are, I think,
    questions about the strength of the Duma," said Miss Rice, referring
    to the Russian parliament.

    Miss Rice and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates were in Moscow to
    discuss the U.S. plan for a missile-defense system in Eastern Europe
    with the Russian leaders. On Friday, they received a chilly reception
    from Mr. Putin and senior Russian officials on U.S. proposals for
    cooperating on the shield that Russia vehemently opposes.

    Miss Rice, a competitive figure skater in her teens, visited a group
    of young skaters at Moscow's Central Army Sports Club yesterday,
    but refused to get on the ice. She stepped gingerly on a blue rug
    laid out on the ice when greeted warmly by the youths, ranging in
    age from 7 to 17.

    While in Moscow, Miss Rice expressed concern about the state of
    U.S.-Turkish relations, appealing to the U.S. ally for restraint
    against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq and in reaction to an Armenian
    genocide resolution in Congress. Two senior U.S. officials in the
    Moscow delegation - Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried and Eric
    Edelman, defense undersecretary for policy - flew to Ankara for direct
    talks with senior Turkish officials.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan plans to seek parliament's
    approval this week for a military incursion into northern Iraq to
    fight Kurdish rebels who attack Turkey from there.

    Meanwhile, the Democrat-led U.S. House of Representatives has moved a
    resolution terming mass killing of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire,
    the forbear of the Turkish republic, as genocide.

    In Ankara, Mr. Fried told a Turkish television interviewer that the
    administration "will do everything we can so that this resolution
    will not come to the House floor."

    Washington is concerned about the centralization of power and
    democratic backsliding ahead of Russia's legislative and presidential
    elections in December and March. Mr. Putin will step down next
    year as president. He has said he would lead the ticket of the main
    pro-Kremlin party in the parliamentary elections and could take the
    prime minister's job later.

    Miss Rice sought opinions and assessments of the situation from eight
    prominent rights leaders.

    "I talked to people about the coming months and how they see the
    coming months. How these two elections are carried out will have an
    effect on whether Russia is making the next step on toward democracy,"
    Miss Rice said after the private sessions at Spaso House, the residence
    of the U.S. ambassador in Moscow.

    Miss Rice declined comment on Mr. Putin's possible political future
    and said she did not raise the matter in her official discussions.

    Earlier, Miss Rice said she hoped the efforts of rights activists would
    promote universal values of "the rights of individuals to liberty and
    freedom, the right to worship as you please and the right to assembly,
    the right to not have to deal with the arbitrary power of the state."

    Vladimir Lukin, the government-appointed human rights ombudsman, was
    quoted by Interfax as saying he told Miss Rice that human rights should
    be discussed in a dialogue rather lecturing in a "doomsday" style.

    The State Department frequently has criticized what Washington
    regards as creeping authoritarianism among Mr. Putin and other top
    Russian leaders.

    Its most recent human rights report on Russia notes continuing
    centralization of power in the Kremlin, a compliant legislature,
    political pressure on the judiciary, intolerance of ethnic minorities,
    corruption and selectivity in enforcement of the law, and media
    restrictions and self-censorship.
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