The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 28, 2002 - 5A Russian journal and oficials given media grant MOSCOW - In what is widely seen as a Kremlin-orchestrated effort to end Russia's unseemly media wars, the country's Press Min- istry granted a broadcast license yesterday to a mix-and-match consortium of Kremlin critics and supporters. The resolution - if it is one - appears inspired less by King Solomon than Dr. Frankenstein: It splices together an award-win- ning journalist, a former Soviet spymaster and a motley crew of oligarchs with little in com- mon except an apparent desire to quell criti- cism that the Kremlin is stifling independent media. "I think the competition was honest," said former prime minister and Soviet foreign intel- ligence chief Yevgeny Primakov, who helped cobble together the winning tender. "What we need to do now is to put together a team that will be public and global in the full sense of the word - without pressure from the government, without pressure from the oligarchs, without any pressure at all." The winners are fronted by controversial TV anchorman Yevgeny Kiselyov, once the Krem- lin's harshest critic, who in recent weeks and days has seemed uncharacteristically compli- ant. Once Russia's leading journalist, Kiselyov has been dethroned twice in the past year - once from the country's leading independent network NTV and a second time from a smaller station, TV-6, where he had taken shelter with many of his former colleagues. "On the outside, the situation looks rather funny," said Pavel Voshchanov, a former presi- dential spokesman and political analyst. "The authorities ended up with something they had been trying very hard to get rid of-- the Kise- lyov team is back on the air. But this is only a superficial impression. Although everything looks the same on the outside, on the inside everything has changed." Kremlin officials including President Vladimir Putin have insisted in public that they had nothing to do with the financial and legal maneuverings that led to the downfall of NTV last year and of TV-6 in January. But few in Russia doubt that the government entities that led the campaigns - the gas monopoly Gazprom in the case of NTV and the Press Ministry in the case of TV-6 - were operating at the Kremlin's behest. The thing both TV companies had in common is that they were owned by the two oligarchs who have been not-so-subtly denounced by Putin as exerting unwelcome influence over their media holdings: Vladimir Gusinsky and Boris Bere- zovsky. Observers noted that since Gusinsky and Berezovsky owned most of the influential non-state media, any attack on their hold- ings was also an attack on independent jour- nalists. The idea behind "Media-Sotsium," as the new consortium is called, is apparently designed to demonstrate that the target was not Kiselyov by finding a way to put him back on the air without the financial backing of Gusin- sky and Berezovsky. The consortium members are supposed to represent diverse views and financial interests, part of an effort to keep Kiselyov and his team from being beholden to any of them. The consortium's senior figure is Primakov. In 1999, when the leadership of the Kremlin was in contention, Primakov was seen as Putin's toughest challenger - until his chances were destroyed by a smear campaign on the Kremlin-backed ORT network. Since then, however, Primakov's political movement has mellowed into a soft, pro-Kremlin centrism. Primakov was apparently seen as an adequately neutral public figure to lead the non- I think the competition was honest. What we need to do now is to put together a team that will be public and global in the full sense of the word - without pressure from the government." - Yevgeny Primakov Former Russian prime minister profit consortium, despite his frequent diatribes at reporters he considers disloyal or unseemly. "It's widely known how (Primakov) feels about journalists," said Andrei Norkin, a for- mer NTV anchorman who put in one of the 14 other bids that lost to Media-Sotsium. The business side of the winning consortium is headed by Arkady Volsky, chairman of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepre- neurs, a Kremlin-endorsed group of business leaders. Since Putin has been in office, the union has been seen as a Kremlin vehicle to dilute and restrain the power of the oligarchs. Media-Sotsium won the tender by a unani- mous vote by a panel appointed by the Press Ministry. Panel member Manana Aslamazyan, director of Internews, a nongovernmental organi- zation that supports independent mass media, said despite the apparent consensus, members debated long and hard before voting because they felt indirectly manipulated by the Kremlin. "What triggered the doubts in our heads was how the merger of a group of journalists and a group of oligarchs under the supervision of pro-government people very loyal to the authorities could work," Aslamazyan said afterward. "Isn't there a great threat to the independ- ence of journalists? Will they not be made to do something that would go counter to their convictions and their beliefs?" Bush raises funds for Republican Senate candidates ATLANTA (AP) - President Bush collected $2.6 million for Republi- can Senate candidates in two states yesterday, hours after signing a cam- paign finance bill that will restrict political fund raising. "I'm not going to lay down my arms," Bush said. The ink on Bush's signature was barely dry when he flew to South Car- olina to raise $1.1 million for Rep. Lindsey Graham, who is seeking the seat being vacated by GOP Sen. Strom Thurmond. "The Senate races are very important for me, I want Republicans to take control of the Senate, I want (Republican Rep.) Denny Hastert to be speak- er of the House," Bush said. "These are the rules, that's why I'm going to campaign for like-minded people." The bill will "make American politics more palatable," said Graham, who voted in favor of the legislation and was a vocal supporter of Bush's 2000 GOP rival, Sen. John McCain, (R-Ariz.) - the most visible sponsor of campaign-finance legislation. "A lot of people feel that. money corrupts the system," Graham said. "People feel like they'll have a better voice." The president then flew to Atlanta to raise an additional $1.5 million for Rep. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, who is trying to oust Democratic Sen. Max Cleland. It was the 13th fund-raiser of the year for Bush. "Saxby Chambliss needs to be in the United States Senate," Bush said. "He loves his family, he loves his country, he's a man of enormous experi- ence." In his two speeches to donors, Bush did not mention the new campaign finance law. Democrats are aggressively raising money, too, and Bush has said he would not stop "unilaterally." Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.) was in South Carolina on Monday for a breakfast fund-raiser benefiting Alex Sanders, the Democrat facing Graham. Today, Bush is heading to Texas to raise at least $1.2 million for Texas Attorney General John Cornyn's bid for Senate, bringing his two-day total to a minimum of $3.8 million. The president was spending a long Easter weekend on his Texas ranch. Yesterday's events raised $250,000 for. South Carolina Republicans and $250,000 for Georgia Republicans. Under new law, some of that "party money" probably will be prohibited. At the same time, he will be permitted to raise twice as much in "hard money" - donations by individuals for candidates themselves - because the legislation raises limits from $1,000 to $2,000. Bush was never an enthusiastic supporter of the legislation known as McCain-Feingold, and renewed his reservations yesterday. He said he was concerned about whether the law will violate the Consti- tution's free speech protections. The White House was noncommittal about whether it will have a role in lawsuits that opponents immediately filed. Bush said he wanted a bill that would have shielded union members and corporate shareholders from seeing their dues or profits channeled to polit- Easter attack possible intaly ROME (AP) - American citizens could be targeted by extremist groups in four Italian cities on Easter Sun- day, the U.S. government warned yes- terday. The State Department said a "possi- ble threat exists to U.S. citizens in the cities of Venice, Florence, Milan and Verona on Easter Sunday from extrem- ist groups." The announcement did not identify the groups or elaborate on the nature of the threats, but it warned that "these groups do not distinguish between offi- cial and civilian targets." It said Americans should "increase their security awareness and avoid large crowds." A U.S. official said the warning was based on information developed in cooperation with Italian authorities. In Washington, Secretary of State Colin Powell said, "For those who are traveling in Italy - in specific places Students stripped in search for lost lunch money KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - School district officials said yesterday an investigation has confirmed that a group of third-grade students were improperly strip-searched for missing lunch money.. According to parents, at least two teachers at Pitcher Elementary searched 23 students for $5 in missing lunch money on March 18. The money was eventually found, though not through the searches. District officials said in a written statement yesterday and in a letter to parents that the searches were "an egregious violation" of school poli- cy. "The District finds the conduct of the adults directly involved in this inci- dent to be abhorrent," district officials said in the statement. The school's principal and two teach- ers were suspended last week pending a school district investigation. School district spokesman Edwin Birch said they remained suspended, but said state law prohibited him from talking about any other disciplinary action they face. Parents have said a female third- grade teacher started the search after other efforts to find the money failed. She reportedly took the girls to a rest- room, then had them pair up in stalls, where they were told to check each other's underwear. The boys went to the gymnasium with a male physical education teacher, who took them one at a time into a locker room where each was told to strip down and shake his underwear, parents said. AP PHOTO President Bush appears in Atlanta, Ga., helping to raise $1.5 million for Rep. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) who Is trying to oust Democratic Sen. Max Cleland. ical causes involuntarily. But, he said, on balance the law will improve the campaign finance sys- tem. "I wouldn't have signed it if I was really unhappy with it," Bush told reporters as he met with emergency and rescue workers at a Greenville, S.C., fire station. Vice President Dick Cheney, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice and some staff members were in the Oval Office when Bush signed the legislation. White House press secretary Ari Fleischer explained the low-key sign- ing: "To hold a giant South Lawn ceremony would not have the air of con- sistency, so the president conducted the signing in a ceremony that was befitting for his beliefs on the bill in its totality," he said. Ranit Schmelzer, an aide to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D- S.D.) said it was a "stealth signing." In both South Carolina and Georgia, Bush promoted his budget proposal to spend $140 million next year to help small communities coordinate in responding to domestic terrorism. "We understand we've got to have a strategy for rural South Carolina and rural America as well," Bush told the rescue workers. In Atlanta, Bush watched as workers in hazardous-materials suits responded to a mock chlorine gas attack. The rescuers stripped one man of most of his clothes and slid him through a decontamination shower as he lay in a stretcher. "That goes beyond the call of duty to impress the president," Bush quipped. "Better you than me." UU Ar Experience Yoga!!! * Yoga Demonstrations * Yoga Lessons & Classes * *Yoga Products * Yoga Therapy * Yoga Discussions Saturday, March 30, 2002 9am-5pm U of M Union Building, Kuenzel Room Free! No sign-up or registration. Just show up! For information call (517) 351-3056 or (734)222-9417 reschbach@yahoo.com or dwachter@umich.edu