The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Putin:Villain abroad, hero at home

-

MOSCOW: To the West he is public enemy number one: snatching land from his neighbours, interferin­g in foreign elections and unveiling weapons that he says render Washington’s missile defence systems obsolete.

But despite — or because of — his reputation abroad, Vladimir Putin is still widely popular in Russia and is all but guaranteed to win a presidenti­al election this week with a landslide.

In part this is because over almost two decades in power he has cracked down on dissent and consolidat­ed Kremlin control over the media.

The president’s most vocal opponent is also barred from appearing on the ballot on March 18 owing to a criminal conviction.

For millions of Russians, however, Putin is the man who brought stability after the political and economic chaos of the 1990s, as well as restoring Moscow’s standing on the world stage following the humiliatin­g collapse of the Soviet Union.

“Putin is a mirror and everyone can see in him what they want,” independen­t political analyst Konstantin Kalachev told AFP.

“For some he is the man who got Russia back off its knees, got the army and defence back on track. For others he raised the quality of life and made sure pensions were paid on time,” he said.

For those abroad, Putin — who in recent years has been variously portrayed as an octopus, The Terminator, Hitler and Batman’s nemesis The Joker on the cover of Western news magazines — means something else entirely.

“But being the West’s main enemy is an acknowledg­ement that he is the number one politician. If they’re scared of you, it means they respect you,” said Kalachev.

The US and Europe hit Russia with sanctions in 2014 over the annexation of Crimea and Moscow’s backing of rebels in Ukraine’s east.

Since then Russia’s support of the Syrian regime in a bloody civil war, allegation­s that Moscow interfered in US presidenti­al elections and the discovery of a state-sponsored Olympic doping programme have further hurt the country’s reputation abroad.

Putin often frames negative foreign coverage of his leadership as a sign that Russia is under attack from a West uncomforta­ble with the country’s new global role.

As he unveiled what he called ‘invincible’ new weapons in his state of the nation address this month, he reminded the audience of the time in the early 2000s when ‘no one listened to us’.

“Listen to us now,” he said before playing video montages that displayed the weapons’ capabiliti­es.

The Russian moderator of a televised discussion last year jokingly told Putin he was the ‘pole of evil’ around which Western powers ‘consolidat­e and mobilise’.

“Can you imagine how they would manage without you?” the moderator asked an appreciati­ve president.

While support for Putin in Russia has dipped slightly in recent months, according to official polls, around 70 per cent of those who are planning to vote say they will back the current president.

His closest competitor, Communist candidate Pavel Grudinin, is projected to garner less than eight per cent of the vote.

“(Putin) expertly exploits all the fears and the complexes of the population,” Kalachev said, adding that the greatest fear was a return to the instabilit­y of the 1990s.

“People are afraid of losing what they already have...and this fear is especially strong in the provinces, where it is hard, but still possible, to live,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A highway in the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre shows an electoral billboard for Putin with lettering in Russian reading ‘18 March 2018’, for the Russian diaspora in the city to vote in the election scheduled on the same date. — AFP photo
A highway in the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre shows an electoral billboard for Putin with lettering in Russian reading ‘18 March 2018’, for the Russian diaspora in the city to vote in the election scheduled on the same date. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia