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Alexander Demianchuk /
Reuters
Governor Vladimir Yakovlev and President Vladimir
Putin attending St. Petersburg's 300th birthday celebrations
May 30. Putin named Yakovlev deputy prime minister Monday.
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ST. PETERSBURG -- President Vladimir Putin appointed St. Petersburg
Governor Vladimir Yakovlev as a deputy prime minister Monday and
put him in charge of reforming the country's housing and utilities
sector.
Putin, who has wanted to move Yakovlev out of the governor's
office since he became president in 2000, has given Yakovlev an
enormous task that few expect him to be able to fulfill.
"This is an acute problem, and none of us would envy a person
in charge of this job," Putin said as he announced the appointment
at a meeting of the State Council, a forum for regional leaders,
in the Hermitage Museum.
If there were any doubt about the significance of the appointment,
it was put to rest by Putin's beaming expression and Yakovlev's
grim face as he stared at the floor.
In addition to the housing and utilities sector, Yakovlev also
was put in charge of transportation and the construction industry.
His new position contains a deep element of irony in light of
the criticism he has taken from the Kremlin for his administration's
failure to do anything about St. Petersburg's deteriorating apartment
buildings or to fix its roads.
Yakovlev will be replaced in the governor's office by his first
deputy, Alexander Beglov, until elections can be held, now planned
for September.
Valentina Matviyenko, Putin's envoy in the Northwest Federal
District, is expected to run with the Kremlin's blessing.
Following Monday's meeting of the State Council, Putin met separately
with Yakovlev, Matviyenko and Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov.
He underlined that the full burden of the sector was being placed
squarely on Yakovlev's shoulders.
"Those who are dealing with your sector may now reasonably
say that it's no longer their problem," Putin told Yakovlev,
Itar-Tass reported.
There had been much speculation in recent weeks that Putin was
preparing a move for Yakovlev, even considering naming him ambassador
to China.
"To be honest, I didn't think about it," Yakovlev said
in an interview with Interfax on Monday. "We had to finish
the preparations to celebrate the 300th anniversary."
He denied there was any trading involved. "The president
himself proposed to me to get busy with this sector," he
was quoted as saying.
There has been no love lost between Putin and Yakovlev -- who
both served under St. Petersburg's former mayor, Anatoly Sobchak
-- since Yakovlev defeated Sobchak in the 1996 elections.
Mikhail
Amosov, head of the communal services commission in the Legislative
Assembly and leader of the Yabloko faction, said Yakovlev was
not the right man for this job.
"It surprises me that Yakovlev is leaving to take a position
in communal services because this area is not in the best of states
in the city, and in the years of his activity nothing has been
done to it," Amosov was quoted by his press service as saying
Monday.
"It would not be efficient to bring the St. Petersburg experience
to the national level. It would perhaps even be dangerous."
Anatoly Kravtsov, who was ousted from his post as speaker of
the Legislative Assembly in 1998 after a dispute with Yakovlev,
also questioned Putin's methods.
"It is for the better for St. Petersburg that he has left,"
Kravtsov said in a telephone interview Monday. "But it is
for the worse for Russia's communal services. This is one of those
decisions that undermines the authority of the government. They
should have retired him."
Vladimir Yeryomenko, a member of the Legislative Assembly who
used to belong to the pro-Yakovlev United City bloc, said it was
clear that the governor was being pushed aside.
"If [in Soviet times] an official that had to be removed
from politics was often appointed to oversee agricultural areas,
now Yakovlev has been given such a hard position that it will
obviously lead to his fall. I won't be surprised if in a year's
time he is fired for not fulfilling his obligations."
Boris Nemtsov, the leader of the Union of Right Forces, agreed
that Yakovlev may fail, but said he is only a "temporary
figure" who is unlikely to survive in any case if a new government
is formed after the State Duma elections in December, Interfax
reported.
Putin has made a vague promise to base the next government on
the parliamentary majority.
Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov praised Yakovlev as an "experienced
manager who knows the problems [of the housing sector] well,"
but said he doubted he would be able to succeed in what his party
sees as a poorly performing government.
See also:
the original at
www.themoscowtimes.com
Housing
and Utilities Reform
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