What a difference an Olympic Games can make. A little over a year ago, Germany's Angela Merkel was being lectured by the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, over the dangers posed by feminist punk rockers Pussy Riot. Now, not only are two members of the band to be freed from prison,
Editorial: Putin's moves on rights a sop to protect games
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Vladimir Putin. Photo / AP
Further international outrage followed when an anti-gay law was passed banning the public discussion of homosexual rights and relationships anywhere that children might hear it. Calls for the Games to be boycotted led to Russian Olympic officials hurriedly stating there would be no consequences for gay athletes who chose, say, to wear rainbow armbands at Sochi.
Finally, however, the spotlight on the Olympics, a pet project for Mr Putin, has forced him to react. The treatment of the imprisoned Pussy Riot members and the so-called Arctic 30 had caused uproar around the world, with thousands at rallies calling for their release. The amnesty law passed by the Russian Parliament with the President's support has freed them, and those convicted for participating in demonstrations against Mr Putin. International condemnation of his record will, for the moment, ease.
This is important because the President's main worry has always been the threat to the Games posed by Chechen guerrillas. Chechnya, just some 300km from Sochi, has been locked down by Moscow since the last of several invasions by the Russian army. But bombings by the guerrillas continue, and the Chechen Muslim leader has vowed to stop the Games. Even by the standards of other modern Olympics, the security at Sochi will be extreme.
Clearly, there is a measure of cynicism in Mr Putin's moves to sanitise Russia's image and to preserve the fiction that he presides over a united and contented nation. Little will have been gained if the crackdown on dissent resumes as soon as the last athlete leaves Sochi. Sometimes, however, it is difficult even for the most dominating of political figures to put the genie back in the bottle. Such are the risks of international exposure.