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Putin Afraid of His Own People - Gorbachev

© RIA Novosti . Ramil Sitdikov / Go to the mediabankFormer Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev - Sputnik International
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Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has suggested a slew of recent laws that critics say are intended to crack down on dissent indicate Russian President Vladimir Putin is “afraid of his own people.”

MOSCOW, March 7 (RIA Novosti) - Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has suggested a slew of recent laws that critics say are intended to crack down on dissent indicate Russian President Vladimir Putin is “afraid of his own people.”

“I am astonished by the amount of laws,” Gorbachev, 82, told the BBC. “The common thread running through all of them is an attack on the rights of citizens.”

Putin has recently signed off on laws significantly increasing for fines for violations of regulations on protests, widening the definition of treason, recriminalizing libel, and introducing internet censorship.

Mass protests against alleged electoral fraud in favor of Putin’s United Russia party at the December 2011 parliamentary elections gave birth to a broad coalition of groups opposed to the former KGB man’s 13-year rule as prime minister and president.

A number of protest figures have since been jailed or are facing criminal charges. Putin denies, however, that a crackdown is underway, saying last year that “everyone” must obey Russia’s laws.

“You shouldn't be afraid of your own people," Gorbachev said. “What people want and expect their president to do is to restore an open, direct dialogue with them. He shouldn't take offence at this.”

Gorbachev, whose glasnost and perestroika reforms led to the collapse of the Soviet Union, also hit out at Putin’s inner circle.

"Even the inner circle, those by his side, there are so many thieves and corrupt officials there. If things don't change, Russia will continue to drift like a piece of ice in the Arctic Ocean,” he said.

The former Soviet leader revealed he had not spoken to Putin for over a year and that relations between the two have “soured.”

"I've criticized him a lot in public. He sometimes loses his temper. Once he said that 'Gorbachev's tongue should be cut short'."

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said he had not seen the BBC interview and declined to comment on the accusations when contacted by RIA Novosti.

 

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