Kaliningrad

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Zelenogradsk

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Svetlogorsk

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Pionerski

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Sovetsk

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Znamensk

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Baltisk

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What Will Be The Colour Of The Next Coloured Revolution?

pasko275

Perhaps it could be EU blue and yellow. Maybe it will be tangerine. (That’ll be tanning salongerine, the nickname of Kaliningrad’s Governor, Georgy Boos.)

Either way, the natives in Kaliningrad are getting restless. They’re tired of the lock-out behind the Schengen version of the Berlin wall and equally disenchanted with ‘Big Brother’, as locals call Russia.

The topic of separatism is once again the big debate, currently the popular New Kaliningrad forum is asking  – ‘Does Russia Need Us?

All this follows a rally in December led by bad boy separatist Sergei Pasko, of the banned Baltic Republican Party. No, not exactly banned, but a clever piece of legislation (2006) was designed to deny Kaliningrad any political voice. A legitimate political party in Russia has to prove a certain following throughout the Federation. Of course, no one from Tomsk to Tatarstan gives a flying blini about Kaliningrad’s problem. Hey, it isn’t even in Russia.

At the time of the missile shield crisis, the New York Times’ Ellen Barry wrote a piece which perfectly captures the dilemma of Kaliningraders. Their loyalties lie with Russia, but of course there should be closer ties to the EU. After all, Kaliningrad is further from Moscow than a whole bunch of other European capitals.

(For the record: Vilnius 350 km , Riga 390 km, Warsaw 400 km, Minsk 550km, Berlin 600 km. Stockholm 650 km, Tallinn 650 km, Copenhagen 680 km, Oslo 850 km, Kiev 850 km, Moscow 1245 km.)

The forum debaters are clued in to the issues. They want to be part of Europe but not NATO. There’s little bonding with Big Brother, but what if they upset him? ‘PrisonerLinkLargeRussia will take every rouble out and not pay our pensions’ warns one poster. Will they be better off in the EU? ‘Oh sure, free like the Poles to go and work in England as cleaners and chicken packers’ says another.

More elegant, then, if Russia and the EU could solve this issue. But a decade of truly inept diplomacy has produced nothing. And that’s when people take their protest to the streets, as is happening now.

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