Russia country profile
Russia emerged from a decade of post-Soviet economic and political turmoil to reassert itself as a world power.
Income from vast natural resources, above all oil and gas, have helped Russia overcome the economic collapse of 1998. The state-run gas monopoly Gazprom is the world's largest producer and exporter, and supplies a growing share of Europe's needs.
Economic strength has allowed Vladimir Putin to enhance state control over political institutions and the media, buoyed by extensive public support for his policies as prime minister, president and now prime minister again.
Spanning nine time zones, Russia is the largest country on earth in terms of surface area, although large tracts in the north and east are inhospitable and sparsely populated.
Overview
This vast Eurasian land mass covers more than 17m sq km, with a climate ranging from the Arctic north to the generally temperate south.President Yeltsin's successor, Vladimir Putin, moved to reduce the political influence of oligarchs soon after taking office, forcing some into exile and prosecuting others.
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former head of the Yukos oil company and a supporter of the liberal opposition, is serving eight years in a Siberian penal colony on tax and fraud charges. Yukos assets were later acquired by the state oil giant Rosneft.
Russia resurgent
During Mr Putin's presidency Russia's booming economy and assertive foreign policy bolstered national pride. In particular, Russia promoted its perceived interests in former Soviet states more openly, even at the cost of antagonising the West.
St Petersburg's State Hermitage houses a vast art collection |
Russia sent troops into Georgia and declared that it was recognising the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, sparking angry reactions in the West and fears of a new Cold War.
At the same time, Moscow threatened to counter plans by the US Bush administration to develop an anti-missile system in Eastern Europe with its own missiles in Kaliningrad Region on Poland's borders. President Obama later withdrew the plan, in a move seen in Russian official circles as a vindication of the assertive foreign policy.
Another source of irritation between Russia and the US is Moscow's role in Iran's nuclear energy programme. Russia agreed in 2005 to supply fuel for Iran's Bushehr nuclear reactor and has been reluctant to support the imposition of UN sanctions on Iran.
A gradual warming in relations between Russia and the US early in 2010 culminated in the signing of a new nuclear arms treaty designed to replace the expired Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (Start) of 1991.
Though disagreements remain between Moscow and Washington over US plans for a missile defence shield, there are signs that the thaw in relations could extend to a greater willingness on the part of Russia to apply pressure on Iran over its nuclear programme.
Economic muscle
The annual Victory Day parade marks the end of World War II |
At a time of increased concern over energy security, Moscow has more than once reminded the rest of the world of the power it wields as a major energy supplier. In 2006, it cut gas to Ukraine after a row between the countries, a move that also affected the supply of gas to Western Europe
Ethnic and religious divisions
While Russians make up more than 80% of the population and Orthodox Christianity is the main religion, there are many other ethnic and religious groups. Muslims are concentrated among the Volga Tatars and the Bashkirs and in the North Caucasus.
Separatists and latterly armed Islamists have made the Caucasus region of Chechnya a war zone for much of the post-Soviet era. Many thousands have died since Russian troops were first sent to put down a separatist rebellion in 1994.
Moscow is convinced that any loosening of its grip on Chechnya would result in the whole of the North Caucasus falling to anarchy or Islamic militancy.
Human rights groups at home and abroad have accused Russian forces in Chechnya of widespread abuses against the public. Since the 11 September attacks on the US Moscow has tried to present its campaign as part of the global war against terrorism.
In a sign of growing confidence that peace might be returning, the Russian authorities called a formal end to the military operation against the rebels in 2009. Sporadic violence continues, however, with a major suicide bomb blast in September 2010 reigniting the debate about the efficacy of the counter-terror campaign.
Facts
- Full name: Russian Federation
- Population: 142.8 million (UN, 2011)
- Capital: Moscow
- Area: 17 million sq km (6.6 million sq miles)
- Major language: Russian
- Major religions: Christianity, Islam
- Life expectancy: 63 years (men), 75 years (women) (UN)
- Monetary unit: 1 rouble = 100 kopecks
- Main exports: Oil and oil products, natural gas, wood and wood products, metals, chemicals, weapons and military equipment
- GNI per capita: US $9,900 (World Bank, 2010)
- Internet domain: .ru
- International dialling code: +7
Leaders
President: Dmitry Medvedev
Dmitry Medvedev was sworn in as president in May 2008, taking office as Russia's third president since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
President Dmitry Medvedev |
In August 2008, he showed that he was determined to maintain his predecessor's assertive foreign policy stance when, in the wake of the conflict between Russia and Georgia, he declared that Russia did not want a new Cold War but was not afraid of one either.
A more liberal side has also been evident. In April 2009, he said in an interview with the liberal Novaya Gazeta daily that democracy should not be compromised for the sake of prosperity.
There were occasional rumours of a rift between the president and his prime minister, and Mr Medvedev's public utterances were closely scrutinised for evidence of differences of opinion.
Many, however, continued to believe that Mr Medvedev was still playing second fiddle to Mr Putin behind the scenes, and it did not come entirely as a surprise when it was confirmed that Mr Putin would stand for the presidency again in the March 2012 election.
Dmitry Medvedev was born in 1965 and has been associated with Vladimir Putin since the early 1990s, when they were both involved in politics in St Petersburg.
Mr Medvedev is a lawyer by training and managed Mr Putin's presidential election campaign in 2000. He subsequently worked as chairman of Gazprom and as first deputy prime minister in charge of social programmes.
Prime Minister: Vladimir Putin
Former president Vladimir Putin was confirmed as prime minister on 8 May 2008, one day after his protege Dmitry Medvedev was sworn in as president.
Mr Putin's unprecedented move from the Kremlin to the premiership completed a carefully staged transition aimed at ensuring he remains at the heart of power.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin |
As prime minister, he has sought to burnish his image as a conservative defender of a strong Russian state. In 2011, he railed against "ill-thought-out experiments based on often unfounded liberalism", and strongly criticised the Western-led military action in Libya.
Mr Putin was barred by the constitution from running for a third presidential term in the elections of March 2008. However, non-consecutive terms are still permissible.
In September 2011 Mr Putin was confirmed as the ruling United Russia party's candidate in the March 2012 presidential election, which he duly won with a large majority over his longstanding Communist rival, Gennady Zyuganov.
New rules extending presidential terms from four to six years could allow him to occupy the top office until 2024.
The smoothness of the planned switch was marred by the December 2011 opposition protests against fraud in the parliamentary elections, which also voiced frustration at the apparent foregone conclusion of Putin's return to presidential power.
Born in St Petersburg in 1952, Vladimir Putin began his career in the KGB. From 1990 he worked in the St Petersburg administration before moving to Moscow in 1996. By August 1999 he was prime minister.
He was named acting president by his predecessor, Boris Yeltsin, and went on to win presidential elections in May 2000, having gained widespread popularity for his pledge to take a tough line against Chechen rebels. He won again in 2004.
Media
Russian TV is dominated by channels that are either run directly by the state or owned by companies with close links to the Kremlin. The government controls Channel One and Russia One - two of the three main federal channels - while state-controlled energy giant Gazprom owns NTV. Critics say independent reporting has suffered as a result.
The Kremlin gained control of mould-breaking NTV in 2001 |
An international English-language satellite news TV, RT, is state-funded and aims to present "global news from a Russian perspective".
Hundreds of radio stations crowd the dial, around 40 in Moscow alone. State-run networks compete with music-based private FM radios. The market leader is privately-owned music station Russkoye Radio.
There are more than 400 daily newspapers, catering for most tastes. The most popular titles support Kremlin policy, and several influential dailies have been bought by companies with close links to the Kremlin.
Russian journalists run the risk of attack and even murder if they delve too deeply into sensitive subjects such as corruption, organised crime or rights abuses. Russia is a regular target for criticism and condemnation from media freedom watchdogs.
Around 59.7 million Russians use the internet (Internetworldstats, June 2010). The web is less tightly controlled than traditional media, and opposition forces have found a home online. The most popular online sources are portals, blogging platforms and social networks.
The standard Russian country code top-level domain ".ru" has been joined by the Cyrillic alphabet rendering of ".rf".
The press
- Komsomolskaya Pravda - mass circulation, left-leaning daily, controlled by energy group YeSN
- Kommersant - daily, business-orientated, controlled by steel tycoon Alisher Usmanov
- Moskovsky Komsomolets - popular privately-owned Moscow daily
- Izvestia - popular daily, owned by media holding NMG
- Rossiyskaya Gazeta - government-owned daily
- Nezavisimaya Gazeta - influential privately-owned daily
- Trud - left-leaning daily, owned by Promsvyazbank
- Argumenty i Fakty - popular weekly, owned by Promsvyazbank
- Novaya Gazeta - twice-weekly, known for its investigative journalism
- The Moscow Times - English-language daily
- The Moscow News - English-language weekly
Television
- Russia One - national network, run by state-owned Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company (VGTRK)
- Channel One - national network, 51% owned by state, 49% by private shareholders
- NTV - national network, owned by state-run Gazprom
- Centre TV - owned by Moscow city government
- Ren TV - Moscow-based commercial station with strong regional network, majority-owned by media holding NMG
- RT - state-funded, international English-language news channel, via satellite
Radio
- Radio Russia - national network run by state-owned Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company (VGTRK)
- Ekho Moskvy - editorially-independent station, majority owned by state-run Gazprom
- Radio Mayak - state-run national network
- Russkoye Radio - major private network, music-based
- Voice of Russia - state-run external service, broadcasts in English and other languages
News agencies/internet
- Itar-Tass - state-owned news agency, pages in English
- RIA-Novosti - state-owned news agency, pages in English
- Interfax - private news agency, pages in English
- Lenta.ru - popular online news source
- Rambler.ru - major portal
- Yandex.ru - leading search engine
- VKontakte - leading social network
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