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Viewing cable 09STPETERSBURG68, PUTIN INTERVENES TO MEET WORKERS' DEMANDS

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09STPETERSBURG68 2009-06-10 09:15 2011-08-24 01:00 UNCLASSIFIED Consulate St Petersburg
R 100915Z JUN 09
FM AMCONSUL ST PETERSBURG
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 2776
INFO AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 
AMCONSUL ST PETERSBURG 
AMCONSUL VLADIVOSTOK 
AMCONSUL YEKATERINBURG
UNCLAS ST PETERSBURG 000068 
 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: RS PGOV ECON
SUBJECT: PUTIN INTERVENES TO MEET WORKERS' DEMANDS 
 
1. (SBU) Summary.  In a display of political drama broadcast on 
national television, Prime Minister Putin rode into the small 
town of Pikalyovo in Leningrad Oblast on June 4 and forced a 
resolution to a simmering labor dispute, meeting workers' 
demands and publicly humiliating the Leningrad Governor, local 
officials, and even his friend Oleg Deripaska in the process 
(although Deripaska ultimately emerged victorious in the 
commercial dispute that lay at the root of the labor unrest). 
Putin's surprise visit followed weeks of labor unrest that 
culminated in a demonstration June 2 when several hundred 
workers blocked a major highway in Leningrad Oblast for seven 
hours to demand payment of their salaries and the reopening of 
three enterprises in their single-industry town.  The workers 
also threatened to block the railroad if authorities fail to 
fully resolve the situation by June 13.  End Summary. 
 
2. (SBU) Pikalyovo is a single-industry town of 20,000 residents 
in Leningrad Oblast and is the home of three interconnected 
enterprises.  Two of the enterprises, Metakhim and Yevrotsement, 
produce cement from byproducts of the third plant, BazelTsement. 
 BazelTsement is owned by billionaire Oleg Deripaska.  The three 
enterprises employ about 10,000 residents of Pikalyovo. 
 
3. (SBU) Serious problems emerged in the town in January 2009, 
when BazelTsement ceased operation, causing the other two 
enterprises to also cease production.  According to official 
sources, there are now about 4,000 unemployed people in the 
town, but the real unemployment rate is likely twice that 
number.  According to the leader of BazelTsement's labor union, 
the total amount of salary arrears is about $1.3 million.  By 
the middle of May, social tensions intensified as a local hot 
water plant shut down due to unpaid debts to the local gas 
supplier, leaving residential buildings, social institutions, 
and hospitals without hot water. 
 
4. (SBU) Oblast and municipal authorities initially attempted to 
reduce tensions in the town by providing Pikalyovo's unemployed 
residents with jobs and housing in other oblast towns. 
According to labor union leaders, however, the jobs were 
low-paying and the housing consisted of single-occupant 
dormitory rooms.  Additionally, the labor union objected to the 
authorities' efforts on the grounds that resettlement of people 
to other towns was not a viable long-term solution for the 
unemployed workers of Pikalyovo. 
 
5. (SBU) On May 21, a group of residents stormed into a local 
administration building and demanded that city officials state 
what was being done to resolve the situation.  On June 1, flyers 
appeared in the town calling people to a demonstration, and the 
message "Pikalyovo, Rise Up!" was painted on a factory chimney. 
When the local administration ordered the message painted over, 
workers at first refused to do so.  According to press reports, 
the police attempted to discover the source of the flyers as 
well as the identity of the message's painters, but were 
unsuccessful. 
 
6. (SBU) On the morning of June 2, workers went to the entrance 
of BazelTsement where they were met by town officials who were 
concerned about a possible protest.  About 400 workers, 
indignant at the manner in which officials addressed them, 
decided to walk to the Vologda-Volkhov highway (about four miles 
away from Pikalyovo) and block traffic.  Demonstrators blocked 
the highway for about seven hours, refusing to leave despite 
appeals from both city officials and company representatives. 
In the early afternoon, the demonstrators received news that 
Leningrad Oblast Governor Valeriy Serdyukov signed a decree 
allocating about $160,000 to pay part of the salary arrears and 
$50,000 in social welfare aid. 
 
7. (SBU) At the end of the rally, protesters signed a petition 
demanding renewed operation at all three factories in the town 
and that all salary arrears be paid.  The petition stated that 
if their demands were not met by June 13, the workers would 
block the railroad connecting St. Petersburg to Vologda. 
Despite heavy police presence at the rally, nobody was detained. 
 
8. (SBU) In a surprise development, Prime Minister Putin went to 
the town on June 4, and called the situation "intolerable."  In 
front of the television cameras, Putin gathered the enterprise 
owners, local officials, Leningrad Oblast officials, including 
Governor Serdyukov and NW Russia PolPred Klebanov. 
Energetically chewing out all in the room, Putin instructed the 
owners to sign agreements to restart work and supply raw 
materials to one another.  Deripaska was shown on television 
being summoned by Putin (who used the familiar form of the verb 
and a crooked finger) to sign the agreement.  Putin then turned 
his ire onto the local and oblast officials present.  While he 
did not single anyone out by name, he said that all involved had 
"run like cockroaches" when they heard the PM was on his way to 
Pikalyovo.  He chastised officials for letting workers go 
without pay and instructed officials and factory owners to fix 
the problem "or we'll fix it without you."  The PM then went 
outside into the crowd of cheering workers and told them that 
their back wages would be paid by the end of the day. Back in 
the meeting room, the cameras showed a clearly unhappy group of 
officials, including Governor Serdyukov.  St Petersburg media 
reported rumors that Serdyukov had offered an undated letter of 
resignation the same day that Putin went to Pikalyovo.  The 
oblast administration subsequently denied the rumors. 
 
9. (SBU) To meet the wage arrearages, Deripaska reportedly had 
to take out a large loan, using his company as collateral, from 
the Russian bank VTB.  Deripaska also signed an agreement with 
Fosagro to supply the necessary raw materials to BazelTsement, 
thereby ensuring its continued ability to operate. 
 
10. (SBU) Comment.  The PM's dramatic intervention and 
resolution of Pikalyovo's labor problems both underscored the 
government's sense of concern over the possible social unrest 
sparked by the economic downturn - a theme we have heard in 
travel across our consular district - and set up a sharp 
contrast between the PM and the President, who was addressing 
CEOs and senior government officials at the posh St Petersburg 
International Economic Forum at the time.  The message was 
unmistakable, with the PM, dressed casually in jeans and a 
sports jacket, publicly rebuking a room full of buttoned-up and 
clearly chagrined oblast and local officials and businessmen, 
including oligarch Deripaska, and then emerging to the cheers of 
the workers, as a man of action.  It was perfectly choreographed 
political theater.  End Comment. 
 
GWALTNEY