The political instability is likely to continue.
MOSCOW, April 9 (AFP) - President Boris Yeltsin faces a crushing defeat on Friday when parliament votes on his young premier-designate Sergei Kiriyenko, deputies warned Thursday. Legislators in the State Duma, the lower house of parliament, said that Kiriyenko, 35, would fail by some distance to garner the necessary 226 votes to secure parliament's endorsement, and could end up with an embarrassingly low tally. The Kremlin has already virtually conceded it will lose Friday's first-round vote, and even Yeltsin's allies in parliament were painting a gloomy picture Thursday. "We can expect that tomorrow there will be less than the 226 votes necessary in the ballot boxes," said Alexander Shokhin, leader of the parliamentary faction of the pro-government movement Our Home Is Russia. "A simple calculation shows that tomorrow will be the first vote on the candidate for prime minister but not the last." Parliament has three chances to approve the president's candidate. Three no votes entitle the head of state to dissolve the chamber and call fresh legislative elections. Other deputies told Interfax Thursday that a range of 120-150 votes is the best that Kiriyenko can expect, while Communist house speaker Gennady Seleznyov said the tally could be barely more than 50 votes in favour of Yeltsin's young lieutenant in the 450-seat chamber. Seleznyov pointed out that only the 51 deputies from maverick ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky's LDPR party have thus far sided with Kiriyenko, and that a paltry return of "scandalous" proportions cannot be ruled out. He said he would urge Yeltsin to choose a different candidate should Kiriyenko taste defeat in the first vote. The number of votes is likely to be an important indicator, as Yeltsin reflects on whom to put forward for the second round and parliamentary deputies mull how far they are prepared to go to defy the Russian president. Yeltsin has stuck firmly with Kiriyenko ever since he plucked him from obscurity as his surprise candidate to replace Viktor Chernomyrdin, who was abruptly sacked as premier along with his government on March 23. The Russian president, who has threatened to dissolve parliament if he does not get his way, has promised to bounce Kiriyenko's name straight back to parliament for a second-round vote if he is rejected Friday. Parliament leaders have not flinched in the face of Yeltsin's dissolution threats, insisting that Kiriyenko's four months as energy minister are insufficient qualifications for the second most powerful politician of a nuclear power. They have also argued that the Kremlin neophyte would be out of his depth if required to take over presidential functions, including the nuclear button, if Yeltsin, 67, succumbs to the frequent bouts of ill-health which have removed him from the political scene for months at a time in recent years. Kiriyenko for his part has consulted busily with parliament chiefs on Russia's future political and economic course, and has also hinted in recent days at policies in his manifesto likely to be popular with key elements in parliament. On Wednesday he announced a list of sanctions which could be slapped on Latvia for its treatment of ethnic Russians, while openly distancing himself from some of the mistakes of the previous government. On Thursday meanwhile he pledged that the government would have to make good growing wage backlogs to unpaid workers, who staged a nationwide demonstration to protest the salary arrears. "It's understandable why people are doing this. They are quite innocent. They are working and not getting paid," said Kiriyenko, chairing a government meeting called to discuss ways to tackle the problem. "The government has a duty to resolve this matter," he said, adding that the government this week transferred 700 million rubles (116 million dollars) to regions suffering the most from public sector wage backlogs. The day of action came as an untimely challenge to the acting premier, though the turnout, which one union leader put at 4.5 million workers, was generally lower than expected.
MOSCOW, April 10 (AFP) - Russian President Boris Yeltsin on Friday urged Duma deputies to approve his choice of prime minister, saying he had "no other candidacy" to put forward but Sergei Kiriyenko's, in a radio address. "The deputies have the right to reflect, examine and consult, but the time factor is becoming decisive. We have been living without a government for too long," the head of state said in a radio statement released in advance by Moscow Echo radio. The broadcast came hours before the State Duma, Russia's lower house, was to examine Kiriyenko's candidacy. Yeltsin said it was impossible to delay solving the country's problems and urged the deputies to decide on Kiriyenko's candidacy as quickly as possible. However, various parliamentary groups have said Kiriyenko's candidacy stood no chance of being agreed on Friday. In that case, Yeltsin would present his candidate a second time and the Duma would then have a week to reconsider. "Perhaps the Duma is ready to wait for another week or more, but the economy will not tolerate it," Yeltsin said, adding "every day the questions which require urgent resolution pile up." Since Viktor Chernomyrdin and the rest of the government was sacked on March 23, Kiriyenko has been acting prime minister and most of the other ministers have stayed in their jobs to carry out the most pressing business. The Russian leader acknowledged that the nomination of a 35-year-old man virtually without experience of government had been "initially welcomed in a circumspect manner, and had been ferociously attacked by some." Yeltsin nonetheless defended his choice, saying: "he is a professional leader, who knows how to work in a team, who knows how to avoid publicising himself and popularism." In a clear attempt to win over left-wing opposition deputies, many of whom are from the provinces Yeltsin argued Kiriyenko "does not see the centre of the economy as being in Moscow, but in the regions, and considers that the solution of economic problems is linked to social issues." Yeltsin repeated that tens of thousands of people had demonstrated and held strikes this week throughout the country to protest against delays in payment of salaries. "The country needs severe financial discipline, so that people don't wait months for salaries and pensions, so that national industry is strengthened, so that the Russian regions really feel the support of the federal power," the Russian president said. |