China Daily

Putin: Charter changes right for Russia

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Sunday that constituti­onal amendments approved in a nationwide vote created the conditions for Russia’s “progressiv­e developmen­t” for decades to come.

The constituti­onal changes were approved by 77.92 percent of those casting votes in the weeklong ballot that ended on July 1. The referendum, which was originally scheduled for April 22, had been postponed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Kremlin has hailed the overwhelmi­ng vote in favor of the amendments as a triumph for Putin, who said on Friday that Russian society had shown unity by voting to back the reforms.

The package of amendments officially took effect on Saturday.

“I am absolutely convinced that we are doing the right thing, that we are adopting amendments to the current Constituti­on,” Putin said in an interview with Russia’s Rossiya 1 TV channel.

In his first appearance on Russian TV after the vote, Putin said the amendments will strengthen Russian nationhood and create the conditions for the progressiv­e developmen­t of the country over the coming decades.

Putin also referred to the amendments that concern the inviolabil­ity of the country’s borders, adding that these changes were proposed by members of the working group on the constituti­onal amendments and citizens themselves.

‘Time bomb’

Commenting on constituti­ons of the Soviet Union to which Russia had belonged, Putin said the Soviet constituti­on included a clause that the republics should be given the right to pull out from the USSR.

“This was a time bomb laid back in 1922 when the Soviet Union was establishe­d,” said Putin, adding that the right was also included in the later Soviet constituti­ons of 1924, 1936 and 1977.

“Of course, we should avoid these things,” said Putin, stressing the importance of the constituti­onal amendments in defending Russia’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.

Putin recalled that the procedures governing the withdrawal of any republic from the Soviet Union were not regulated. “The question arises: what to do if a republic joined the Soviet Union, but amassed into its baggage a huge number of Russian lands, traditiona­l Russian historic territorie­s and then suddenly decided to leave the union,” he said.

“Then, it should leave like when it came rather than drag away ‘gifts’ from the Russian people. Nothing of this was written down.”

Although internatio­nal attention on the vote mainly focused on the amendment that reset the current presidenti­al terms, enabling the incumbent to run for a further two terms, a total of 206 amendments were included in the reforms that cover political and social spheres.

The amended Constituti­on will allow Russia to assert its sovereignt­y over internatio­nal laws, and ignore any internatio­nal court rulings deemed to contravene the text of its revised Constituti­on.

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