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, but charges against the 30-strong crew of a Greenpeace ship detained after an Arctic protest have been dropped following a Kremlin amnesty. The two New Zealanders in that crew - David Haussmann and Jon Beauchamp - can attribute their freedom not to any change of mind by Mr Putin about drilling for oil in the Arctic but to the looming Sochi Winter Games.
It's not unusual, of course, for the Olympics and politics to become intertwined. But it is quite a while since the impact has been so pronounced. The international attention that will fall on the Black Sea venue in February has prompted a number of steps that run dramatically counter to Mr Putin's human rights record and his determination to eradicate dissent.
Fifteen months ago, this caused tens of thousands of people to take to the streets of Moscow to protest against new repressive laws, arrests and the interrogation of activists. Germany's Parliament reflected international opinion in passing a resolution that linked Russia's rollback of democratic freedoms to Mr Putin's return to the presidency.
For a time, the President carried on undeterred. Russian prosecutors and tax inspectors raided human rights watchdogs in a clampdown on foreign-funded charities and non-governmental organisations operating in the country. Some in the Kremlin claimed they were fomenting dissent.