A $30
million splurge on Putin's daughter's favorite sport
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[December 09, 2016]
By Jack Stubbs
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia is building a
$30 million complex for acrobatic rock'n'roll, a niche sport in
which President Vladimir Putin's daughter is a leading dancer and
has a senior role for development, a Reuters review of public
documents has shown.
The Zhavoronki Acrobatic Rock'n'Roll Center will be built on the
western outskirts of Moscow at a cost of 1.9 billion roubles,
according to state tender documents available online, and will be
funded by the municipal government.
It will be the only specialized facility in the world for the sport,
according to governing body the World Rock'n'Roll Confederation
(WRRC). The money being invested dwarfs that spent on some other,
bigger, sports in Russia such as archery and biathlon.
The complex is being built for the Moscow City Khamovniki state
sports and dance school, where Katerina Tikhonova - identified by
Reuters last year as Putin's youngest daughter - was trained in
acrobatic rock'n'roll and for which she competed several times until
2014.
(http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/russia-capitalism-daughters)
The 30-year-old is a top Russian acrobatic rock'n'roll dancer, a
vice president at the WRRC, and also a senior official in the
sport's national federation, chairing its international committee
and committee for Russian regional development. Her former dance
coach heads the Khamovniki school.
Reuters has no evidence the Kremlin or Tikhonova had any influence
over the Moscow city government's decision to build the complex.
Tikhonova, the Moscow city sports department and the Russian
Federation of Acrobatic Rock'n'Roll did not respond to repeated
requests for comment about Tikhonova's role in the project or its
expense.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "This topic does not have any
relation to us."
The Moscow city construction department said the complex was part of
a wider program of state-funded sports facilities that were
important for the city.
"Moscow attaches great importance to building sports facilities.
Over the past five years in Moscow the number of new sports
facilities being brought on-stream has effectively doubled," the
department said in a statement sent to Reuters.
Around 9,000 people actively participate in acrobatic rock'n'roll in
Russia and organizers aim to add another 3,000 people by 2020,
according to the national federation.
By comparison, more than 22,000 people actively participate in
archery in Russia but only 21 million roubles of state money will be
spent developing the sport this year, according to the Russian
Archery Federation.
The federation said there was no specialized center of any kind in
the country for archery, a sport in which Russia won a silver medal
at the Rio Olympics in August.
Around 19,000 people participate in biathlon in Russia, according to
the Russian Biathlon Union, but the body does not receive any state
funding.
HELICOPTER PAD
The documents seen by Reuters show plans for a 1.3-hectare complex
with a gymnasium, trampoline hall, 25-metre swimming pool, and
competition space with seating for up to 2,000 people. There will
also be accommodation facilities for 300 people as well as a
conference hall and lecture theater. "Rock'n'Roll" is written on the
side of the main building in large white letters.
Construction firm Magnum, the contractor chosen to build the center,
will also be required to complete a number of "beautification
projects", including a network of running and walking paths and a
helicopter landing pad. Work will begin this month and is due to be
completed by September 2018.
Magnum did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A clause
in the contract it signed with the municipal government, among the
documents available online, says the company is not allowed to
discuss the project with journalists without the approval of the
tendering party.
A concept drawing on the website of Moscow City state enterprise
"Big Sports Arena 'Luzhniki'", the government company tendering the
contract, shows a multi-storey building in dark brick and wood
cladding with panoramic windows looking out over a landscaped
parking lot and sports fields.
The general secretary of the sport's WRRC global body, Kresimir
Bosnar, said he was surprised by the amount of money Russia was
spending on the center.
[to top of second column] |
Katerina Tikhonova (L), daughter of Russian President Vladimir
Putin, dances with Ivan Klimov during the World Cup Rock'n'Roll
Acrobatic Competition in Krakow, Poland, in this April 12, 2014 file
photo. REUTERS/Jakub Dabrowski/File Photo
"I don't see any reason why to do it. Especially not in Russia"
given the low participation numbers, he said, adding that the
Slovenian-based WRRC had no connection to the project.
"Rock'n'roll acrobatic is a quite specific sport, it is an
individual sport based on couples, it is not a mass sport. So you
cannot expect that you will have millions of people dancing
acrobatic rock'n'roll in the future."
Lubov Sobol, an opposition politician in Moscow and prominent
anti-corruption campaigner, said the center was being built so
Tikhonova could run it.
"It seems obvious that there is a political story here," she said
about the documents, without providing any specific evidence of
political influence. "Moscow is just building this place to satisfy
the personal ambitions of the president's daughter."
NICHE DISCIPLINE
Russia has a long history of investing heavily in sport and Putin
has used sporting success to promote an image of his country as a
resurgent global power. On his watch, Russia spent more than $50
billion hosting the Winter Olympics in 2014, making them the most
expensive Games ever staged.
But Russia's economy is now two years into a deep economic slump,
hit by Western sanctions over the Ukraine crisis and a collapse in
global oil prices. The government has been forced to make painful
cuts to welfare spending in an effort to balance the budget and real
disposable incomes fell 5 percent in the first ten months of 2016
compared to the same period last year.
With just over 200 adult pairs in the WRRC world rankings, acrobatic
rock'n'roll remains a niche discipline in competitive dancing that
is most popular in eastern Europe.
Tikhonova and her dance partner Dmitry Alekseev are currently ranked
11th in the world and sixth in Russia after taking second place at
the national championships in Saint Petersburg in November.
She has competed for the Khamovniki school multiple times,
competition records show, representing the school until at least
2014 before moving to join the Moscow Rock Comets club in 2015.
The records also show Tikhonova was trained by the school's director
and Russian national team coach Tatyana Bystrova, who sits on both
the committees she heads at the Russian Federation of Acrobatic
Rock'n'Roll.
Bystrova did not reply to repeated requests for comment.
Staff at the school - a modern, multi-storey building in an upscale
part of central Moscow - referred all questions to Bystrova, who
they said was at important meetings and unable to speak.
Surrounded by high fences and dense pine trees, the site for the
Zhavoronki Acrobatic Rock'n'Roll Center is around 8 km from a
property Tikhonova declared as her home address when registering a
company in 2012. A sign on the gate says the land is owned by the
Khamovniki school.
(http://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-capitalism-propertymanager-idUSKCN0WX1MU)
Construction site manager Alexei Kozlov said he was not allowed to
discuss the details of the project and did not know of any
connection to Tikhonova or Putin's family. A security guard said the
workers were building a "deluxe dance center" which would be "very,
very expensive".
(Additional reporting by Maria Tsvetkova; Editing by Christian Lowe
and Pravin Char)
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