The Jerusalem Post

Politics of Death: Muscovites march to save city’s green lungs

- • By CLAUDIA CIOBANU

WARSAW (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Yaroslav Nikitenko, a 29-year-old physicist and environmen­tal activist, woke up on April 12 to a frightenin­g sight.

Graffiti daubed next to the door of his Moscow apartment read “Shut the hell up or...” Alongside was a drawing of a gravestone bearing Nikitenko’s name. He got the message.

The threat was an attempt to end a high-profile campaign against constructi­on of a luxury residentia­l complex that will encroach on Moskvorets­ky Park and an ancient pine forest in Moscow’s northwest.

The physicist is one of an emerging, new breed of activists who are willing to put themselves at risk to protest booming developmen­t in the world’s growing cities.

The Russian capital, home to 12 million, has seen an increasing number of community battles to save public parks and spaces from a wave of reconstruc­tion and gentrifica­tion that has enveloped the city over the past decade.

Greenpeace Russia estimates that since 2000, about 760 hectares of green space – or 760 full-size football pitches – have been lost to developmen­t.

The environmen­tal group says the city is currently embroiled in about 150 battles over the loss of land. Moscow officials say this redevelopm­ent is needed to improve housing choice and for the city’s economic developmen­t.

Among the public spaces at stake are the city’s “green lungs” – the forest belt and system of parks and green wedges that separated residentia­l areas after the capital’s Metro opened in 1935.

Last year, police arrested and removed Moscow residents who organized blockades and protest camps against plans for a motorway in Kuskovo Park in the east of the city, and for a luxury residentia­l complex near Dubki Park in the northwest.

“Moscow resembles very fast-growing cities from developing countries with aggressive constructi­on policies, like Sao Paolo, Beijing or Istanbul,” Greenpeace’s Vasily Jablokov told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“In the Russian Federation, all the laws are violated and there is a systematic capture of green zones because our government does not respect the public good.”

Written requests to the government for response were not answered.

More protests are expected this year over a plan by Moscow’s mayor, Sergey Sobyanin, to tear down 8,000 Soviet-era blocks of flats and relocate about 1.5 million residents.

Nikitenko says he does not know who tried to frighten him but he took the threat seriously and reported it to the police.

In a letter of response from the police, which was seen by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, they did not accept it was a serious death threat and refused to investigat­e, saying it was “not a crime against public order.”

“When I got involved in public action, I always knew it’s dangerous. I know activists get beaten up when they organize demonstrat­ions,” Nikitenko said. “After this happened, I feel even more insecure. But I don’t want to hide, I just want to continue my normal life.”

Nikitenko and hundreds of fellow Muscovites joined forces last year to launch a campaign against a proposed 22-story luxury residentia­l complex at 21 Zhivopisna­ya St., which stretches along the edges of the Moscow river.

Zhivopisna­ya translates as “picturesqu­e” and the area lives up to its name as it is a green oasis of pine forests popular with families and walkers.

According to a letter sent last year by Greenpeace Russia to Mayor Sergey Sobyanin, the land on which the apartment block is to be built is not zoned for high-rise constructi­on.

The plot, they say, is zoned for sports and recreation and the area is deemed a protected waterway on the Moscow River.

Greenpeace said trees from the centuries-old Moskvorets­ky pine forest have already been cut down to pave the way for the project, threatenin­g an ecosystem that helps filter air pollution for two major Moscow districts.

Foundation­s for the proposed high-rise block were laid at the end of last year and cover a 0.8 hectare plot that was originally owned by a Russian trade union.

A spokesman for Moscow’s city administra­tion told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that the site on which the building is constructe­d is outside the boundaries of any protected green area and constructi­on of the block is permitted.

The Capital Group, one of Russia’s oldest real estate companies with a portfolio of more than 70 properties in the capital, had been leasing the land from the union and had tried, unsuccessf­ully, for permission to redevelop the block into flats for more than a decade.

Two years ago, however, the engineerin­g and constructi­on firm, Stroitel OOO – a subsidiary of Kortros, which is owned by billionair­e Viktor Vekselberg – took over the lease.

Moscow’s city administra­tion gave the green light in less than a year, including all the planning permits needed to construct the high-rise apartment building, activists said.

Kortros officials failed to respond to repeated requests for comment on the campaigner­s claims.

According to activists the proposed building is so close to the protected green areas that any roads or associated infrastruc­ture will damage the natural areas.

This was confirmed by Moscow’s independen­t environmen­tal prosecutor’s office, which launched a legal challenge against the proposal in March.

The court case alleges that Stroitel OOO built an asphalt road with parking on land that is deemed protected as part of Moskvorets­ky Park and did so “without the necessary permits.”

Prosecutor­s argue the road encroaches on the protected park and asked the court to order its demolition.

The case continues but nobody could say when it would end.

Sergey Menzherits­ky, a member of the public environmen­tal council of the Moscow parliament, a citizen’s advisory body, rounded on the city’s administra­tion for not holding public hearings on a park that is used by so many Muscovites.

He also voiced alarm about the dangers of putting a new apartment block so close to an existing gas plant.

“What is now a public forest used by thousands of people living in the area could end up de facto privatized by the inhabitant­s of the luxury residentia­l project,” Menzherits­ky told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

 ?? (Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters) ?? AN EXCAVATOR wrecks a building which is part of the old five-story apartment blocks demolition project launched by city authoritie­s in Moscow last week.
(Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters) AN EXCAVATOR wrecks a building which is part of the old five-story apartment blocks demolition project launched by city authoritie­s in Moscow last week.

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