24.08.2007 RUSSIA: ADVANCING IN THE WAR AGAINST CANCER, RETREATING ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE
By Marlene Kaufmann, General Counsel
The
first Russian Forum on Health or Tobacco convened in Moscow May
28-29, 2007, under the auspices of the State Duma and in
collaboration with a broad array of international organizations
including the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International
Union Against Cancer (UICC). United States support and participation
was provided by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the American
Cancer Society, the American Russian Cancer Alliance (ARCA) and the
Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, as well as Johns Hopkins University
and the University of Maryland School of Law.
Russia has the
third highest per capita cigarette consumption in the world and some
375,000 Russians die every year from smoking-related diseases. Low
cigarette taxes – which contribute to a selling price of
approximately 50 cents per pack in Russia, as opposed to $5.00 in EU
countries – combined with weak tobacco control legislation
contribute to a growing burden on Russia’s health care system. One
of the primary aims of the Forum was to educate the public,
particularly young people, about the dangers and long-term effects
of the use of tobacco products.
The driving force in
organizing this first ever forum on tobacco control is Dr. Nikolay
F. Gerasimenko, Deputy Chairman of the Health Care Committee of the
State Duma, who worked with the leadership of the renown N.N.
Blokhin Russian Cancer Research Center and the Russian Research
Institute of Pulmonology to bring the conference to
fruition.
The morning plenary of the Forum was chaired by
Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov who expressed his strong support for the
work of the Forum and efforts to curb tobacco-related diseases.
Speaker Gryzlov was joined by Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzkhov, United
States Ambassador William Burns and an array of celebrities from the
Russian music and film industries as well as national sports figures
in an appeal to the public, especially young people, to quit
tobacco. House Majority Leader Congressman Steny H. Hoyer also
addressed the forum through a pre-recorded video presentation.
Congressman Hoyer has supported the work of NCI and the American
Russian Cancer Alliance (ARCA) in combating tobacco-related cancers,
as well as ARCA’s cutting edge research in curing solid
tumors.
The Forum was well attended and well covered by
Russian national media and its impact was immediate. During the
conference the State Duma gave tentative approval to legislation
aimed at restricting smoking in public places such as restaurants
and waiting lounges in train stations and airports. A Russian
Anti-Tobacco League was created to consolidate the efforts of
anti-tobacco forces in the Russian Federation, and in July the
Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that Russia will join
the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
Bending
Swords In To Plowshares
One of the sponsors of the
anti-tobacco forum, the American Russian Cancer Alliance (ARCA),
represents a unique partnership between scientists in the Russian
Federation and their counterparts in the United States. The primary
focus of ARCA activities is the use of isotopes derived from Russian
nuclear weapons stockpiles in cancer detection, diagnosis and
treatment.
The Russian partners in the Alliance include the
N.N. Blokhin Russian Cancer Research center in Moscow and the
Russian Research Center at the Kurchatov Institute. On the U.S.
side, the Alliance partners are the Fox Chase Cancer Center in
Philadelphia and the University of Maryland Greenebaum Cancer Center
in Baltimore. In addition to these partners, ARCA has developed
relationships with a number of other hospitals and research
institutions in Russia and the U.S. Each member of the Alliance
brings unique strengths and talents to what is a true intellectual
and scientific partnership. These scientific strengths have been
coupled with a strong commitment on the part of the two nations to
work together on the peaceful use of nuclear technology.
In
conjunction with the Moscow Forum on Tobacco or Health, ARCA and NCI
representatives met with senior members of the Russian Academy of
Sciences to discuss possible joint nanohybrid studies dedicated to
scientific projects and clinical trials to develop new methods of
diagnosis and treatment for a broad range of cancers.
The
collaborative research projects that are being conducted as part of
the ARCA partnership involving the use of Russian radioisotopes are
yielding extremely promising results. Although these isotopes were
created for more sinister purposes, they are now being utilized in
research aimed at reducing the burden of cancer in both the U.S. and
the Russian Federation – demonstrating that those who once were
enemies can now work together for the common good. It is the hope of
all associated with the ARCA effort that the collaboration can
continue and that the Russian isotopes produced for weapons of mass
destruction can be converted to instruments of mass
benefit.
Whither Democracy?
Unfortunately, prospects
for advancement in other areas of Russian society are not so bright.
It is certainly true that, in Moscow at least, business is booming
-- attributable in large part to growing energy revenues. New
commercial construction and infrastructure projects abound, the
retail sector is flourishing, and there is a rising middle class.
These apparently liberalizing economic trends are, however, not
accompanied by liberalizing democratic trends, in fact, quite the
opposite.
Many respected civil society and non-governmental
organizations whose goal is to promote civic and political
engagement and enhance democratic development and the rule of law
have been harassed and intimidated by the tax police and other
government entities. Some, like Open Russia, have been forced to
shut down for alleged violations of finance controls. The three
national TV networks are essentially controlled by the Kremlin and
much of the print media is controlled by one or another level of
government or business interests sympathetic to the government. The
Committee to Protect Journalists reports that since the year 2000,
fourteen journalists have been murdered in the Russian Federation in
retaliation for their professional activities, making Russia the
third most dangerous country for journalists (after Iraq and
Algeria). None of these killings have been solved, although
authorities claim progress in some cases. Among the victims was
renowned investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya, murdered
gangland-style in Moscow in November 2006.
Commission
Chairman Congressman Alcee L. Hastings and Co-Chairman Senator
Benjamin L. Cardin wrote to President Vladimir Putin in June
expressing serious concern about the lack of media freedom in
Russia. On August 2, 2007 the Commission convened a hearing on
“Freedom of the Media in the OSCE Region,” with a particular focus
on developments in Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkey. More
information regarding the hearing and this issue can be found on the
Commission’s website at www.csce.gov.
The rule of law is
under assault in Russia as well. Recently the Prosecutor General in
Moscow filed a request with the Moscow Bar Association to disbar
Karinna Moskalenko, one of Russia’s most distinguished human rights
lawyers. Moskalenko is a member of the International Commission of
Jurists and through her Center for International Protection in
Moscow has represented, among many others, the family of murdered
journalist Anna Politkovskaya, imprisoned Russian oil executive
Mikhail Khodorkovsky and political activist Gary Kasparov.
In
addition to the courts of the Russian Federation, Ms. Moskalenko
pursues the interests of her clients before the European Court of
Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg, where she has had many successes
– apparently sparking the Kremlin’s ire and, according to some
observers, generating the pending disbarment procedure. Commission
Chairman Hastings and Ranking Member Congressman Christopher H.
Smith joined other members of the Congressional Human Rights Caucus
in a May 24, 2007 letter to President Putin urging withdrawal of the
disbarment request.
Sadly, many observers of civil society
and those in the NGO community in Russia see little hope of positive
change in this situation in the near term notwithstanding upcoming
Russian parliamentary and presidential elections scheduled for
December 2007 and March 2008 respectively. The good news is, it does
not appear that those who support democratic development in Russia
are throwing up their arms in defeat. Rather, they remain steadfast
and appear to be girding themselves for the long haul.
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