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Saturday, May 18 2013
Tackling Poverty
IT is tempting to wonder how much of an appetite Barack Obama will have for dinner on Thursday evening (17May). That afternoon, ahead of the two-day meeting of the G8 at Camp David, which kicks off on Friday, he will announce what is currently being called "the new alliance to increase food security and nutrition"...
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PORING through Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel's new book, What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets, I found myself over and over again turning pages and saying, "I had no idea." I had no idea that in the year 2000, as Sandel notes, "a Russian ...
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Thousands take civic action in Russia

AP

MOSCOW

PROMINENT Russian novelists and poets led a street protest by more than 10,000 people in Moscow on Sunday without obtaining the required permit, and police did not intervene.

The demonstrators skirted the law by remaining silent and carrying no posters, even though the demonstration had clearly been organised as an anti-President Vladimir Putin rally.

The gathering was the latest of several impromptu protests that have taken place in Moscow since Putin’s inauguration on Monday, held by people unhappy that he is the country’s formal leader once again.

Lyudmila Ulitskaya, a best-selling author whose books have been translated internationally, lauded Moscow authorities for their restraint on Sunday.

“Today’s a significant day for the city,” she said. “The Moscow government is being reasonable for the first time. It has realised that the protest movement is not about people who break shop windows and throw Molotov’s cocktails.” Police had detained hundreds of people who tried to get near Putin’s cortege during the inauguration, some of whom were merely wearing white ribbons, a symbol of the Russian protest.

Since then, activists have staged “flash mobs” across Moscow, suddenly assembling in public places where they camp and remain for the night. Many of them have been detained for taking part in an unsanctioned gathering.

On Sunday afternoon, the Russian writers led what they termed a “stroll” in Moscow aimed at defending people’s rights to gather on the streets without authorities’ permission.

Best-selling novelist Grigory Chkhartishvili, better known under the pen name Boris Akunin, said before the walk began that he and his fellow authors wanted to check if people can really get detained “because they were putting on white ribbons.” “The meaning of this stroll is to show that we didn’t like the way authorities treated us in the first days of Putin’s presidential term,” he said.

“If that was the face of a new Putin we’ve been promised‚ we don’t want this. He can either change his ways or we will stay on the streets.” The organisers‚ Akunin, Ulitskaya, children’s book author Eduard Uspensky and political poet Dmitry Bykov‚ were besieged by fans seeking autographs.

The protesters walked about 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) along Moscow boulevards from a monument to the iconic 19th-century poet Alexander Pushkin to one honouring his contemporary, playwright Alexander Griboyedov. None of the marchers chanted slogans, as they had at previous demonstrations, and police didn’t stop the march, as they had last week.


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