[Ksenia] Sobchak: You want your children to live in a stable country without revolution?
[Chulpan] Khamatova: Without revolution. It could be some kind of changes in mindset. Without revolutions. I don’t want revolution. I’m categorical on this point, because the heads of completely innocent people fly in revolution and all these wars. I don’t think it’s right. Both sides have to do their utmost to avoid this.
Sobchak: But would you accept any compromise for the sake of avoiding revolution? Figuratively speaking, I don’t know whether you have any notion of geopolitics or not, whether you understand what’s happening in North Korea. People eat grass, and there’s a city within a city where officials live, while [ordinary] people live a completely different life without electricity. It’s just that I’ve been there, and so I know what I’m talking about. To put it starkly, which would you choose—living in a country like North Korea, for example, or revolution?
Khamatova: I would choose North Korea. I don’t want victims. It means that the people who oppose this regime lack certain tactics, know-how, and wisdom, that’s all.
Source: “Chulpan Khamatova: ‘I’m afraid of lots of things,'” TV Rain, 6 June 2012. Translated by the Russian Reader. Thanks to Comrade Koganzon for reminding me of Ms. Khamatova’s untimely dalliance with Putinism and “stability” at all costs. She now lives in exile in Latvia, of course—not in Russia or North Korea, God forbid. ||| TRR
Russian holiday-goers are set to be the first known tourists allowed into North Korea since it closed its borders as a pandemic response in early 2020. A five-day jaunt was arranged by an agency in Primorsky Krai after the eastern region’s governor visited the hermit kingdom’s capital for talks. The countries pledged closer ties after a series of meetings in September.
Source: The Economist, “The World in Brief,” 12 January 2024
Friends, we apologize for replacing the video. The Zygar channel team reposted it due to a factual textual error, but the time codes remain the same.
Since I am a writer, I think that in the near future I will have to write a book which could be called The Empire Must Die, but only about another empire—Putin’s Russia.
And, of course, in this book one of the most important characters will be Chulpan Khamatova, the actress and co-founder of the Gift of Life charitable foundation.
She was one of the first to protest against the war with Ukraine and leave Russia.
Chulpan will talk about her life, starting the foundation, her encounters with Putin, and fighting for the lives of children, friends, and her own honor.
[…]
You can help children with cancer and donate an affordable amount to the Gift of Life Foundation: https://podari-zhizn.ru/ru.
00:00 – First meeting with Putin
09:57 – The germ of charity
13:30 – Anton Chekhov in the Kremlin
17:47 – Meeting Yuri Shevchuk
21:40 – The foundation’s first concert
24:31 – On medicine, doctors, and building a new hospital
26:41 – Putin and the PR move
30:22 – The Friendship Medal and the search for the missing money
33:20 – The relationship between Putin, the doctors and the clinic
36:53 – Canceling Matvienko and Gref’s speech
40:10 – Putin’s meeting with the creative intelligentsia
42:07 – Putin on democracy and freedom
45:24 – Chulpan, Putin, and the breast pump
48:48 – President Dmitry Medvedev in the lives of charitable organizations
49:44 – Medvedev’s meeting with foundations, the story about the hamsters and beads
1:01:51 – Putin’s election campaign
1:07:05 – “This clinic should be turned over to the doctors.”
1:09:57 – Decentralization of hospitals, opening the center in Yekaterinburg
1:14:50 – Bullying and depression
1:18:58 – “Chulpan chooses North Korea”: the problematic headline
1:25:50 – “If I chose North Korea, why didn’t I stay there?”
1:28:53 – Reorganizing the foundation”from a church into a McDonald’s”
1:31:32 – Unholy Chulpan and Dima Yakovlev’s Law
1:35:53 – One-on-one with Putin
1:44:23 – Petition for the annexation of Crimea
1:45:53 – Offer to become children right’s ombudsperson
1:54:44 – Kirill Serebrennikov and detention
2:01:22 – Last meeting with Putin
2:05:56 – “Should I be afraid?”
2:09:56 – War in Ukraine: 24 February 2023
2:16:23 – The difficulty of emigration
Source: ZYGAR (YouTube), “Chulpan Khamatova: North Korea, meetings with Putin, answering the haters,” 16 February 2023. Annotation translated by the Russian Reader
