'Together Again': 'Russian Davos' to go ahead in person with Putin,
despite pandemic
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[June 01, 2021]
By Katya Golubkova and Polina Nikolskaya
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Thousands of officials
and executives will gather in person in St Petersburg this week - and
President Vladimir Putin will give a speech - as the annual economic
forum Moscow pitches as "the Russian Davos" returns despite the COVID-19
pandemic.
For years, Russia has used the St Petersburg International Economic
Forum (SPIEF) to try to attract foreign investment, discuss economic
policy and project an image that it is open for business. It was
cancelled last year due to the pandemic, but is back on, with the title
"Together Again".
A negative COVID-19 test is required to access the venue, which will be
disinfected, with doors and elevators cleaned once every two hours.
Attendees will be expected to wear masks and gloves, which are typically
required in public places in Russia.

On Tuesday, St Petersburg reported 817 new coronavirus cases in the last
24 hours and 38 deaths.
The pace of vaccination in Russia has so far been slower than in many
developed countries, even though Russia has been exporting its own
vaccine, Sputnik V. The health minister said last week around 17 million
of Russia's 144 million people had received at least one dose.
The June 2-5 forum will host guests from 130 countries and 1,200
companies, said organiser Roscongress. Only 128 of nearly 1,000
panelists will appear online.
Putin will appear in person, with the two highest ranking foreign guests
- Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani and Austrian Chancellor
Sebastian Kurz - appearing online.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin waves while walking along Red
Square after a military parade on Victory Day, in central Moscow,
Russia May 9, 2021. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina/File Photo

Many international business executives and officials
have shunned the conference since 2014, when Moscow angered the West
by annexing the Crimea peninsula from Ukraine, although some have
begun to return in recent years.
Among those listed as scheduled to appear this year are Patrick
Pouyanne, chief executive of French energy company Total, Qatar
Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker, and Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, the
Saudi energy minister.
Kremlin critics often use the event to highlight what they say are
human rights abuses and politically-motivated business decisions
that hurt Russia as an investment destination. The Kremlin denies
abusing rights and says it protects foreign investors.
The World Economic Forum, with which Russia compares its conference,
replaced this year's annual event in the Swiss ski resort of Davos
with a virtual conference in January. It had also announced an
in-person event to be held later this year in Singapore, but said
two weeks ago that it was cancelled.

(Reporting by Katya Golubkova and Polina Nikolskaya; Editing by
Andrew Osborn and Peter Graff)
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