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Chairman Wang Jianlin Visits Russia: An Impression of Russia

22.02.2012
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\Ukraine Hote\Lake Baikal

 Recently, Chairman Wang Jianlin paid a visit to Russia along with a Chinese official delegation for eight days. The 10,000-plus-kilometer trip covered from St. Petersburg to Vladivostok, across the Russian territory, from the east to the west, and generated a brand new understanding of Russia. The discoveries along the trip are quite interesting.

Indescribable Russia

Upon arrival at Moscow, officials from the Chinese Embassy in Russia described Russia to us in four sentences: Russia is neither a backward country, nor a developed one; neither a nation with dictatorship, nor a democratic one. A few days later we started to understand these descriptions better. If we only focus on Moscow and St. Petersburg, they are in no way inferior to Beijing and Shanghai. The seven grand buildings that were constructed in Moscow during the reign of Stalin look absolutely magnificent and stunning; and the architectures like luxurious Ukraine Hotel and Gum Shopping Mall are also rarely found in China. The per capita GDP and income in Russia are much higher than those of the Chinese, making Russia seem a developed country. But except these two cities, other cities only contain old houses, uneven roads, and backward infrastructure. We went to Irkutsk to attend the Baikal International Forum, which is said to be the equivalent of Boao Forum in Russia. This was the 12th session of the Forum which carries considerable influence. We stayed in the best local hotel, a so-called "four-star" one, whose infrastructure is not as good as that of a hostel in a county hardware and even the county's hostel. The International Conference Center, where the Forum took place, looks as ugly as a factory, and its facilities inside are incomparable to any conference centers in China. Even at the opening ceremony, the microphone failed to work several times, which made the scene very awkward. In comparison, apart from metropolis such as Beijing and Shanghai, China also has other developed cities like Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, and Chengdu. But the development of Russia is too unbalanced. Judging from the regions, Russia is really like a backward country. After Putin has been in power for many years, he will soon swap positions with Medvedev to become the next president, such that Russia seems like a country ruled by dictatorship. Yet the Russian president must be elected, and Russia has opposing parties, which even run opposition television stations and newspapers. Many people criticize Putin on television every day. All these facts make Russia look like a democratic nation. Perhaps being atypical is precisely the characteristic of Russia.

Expensive prices

Rumor has it long time ago that things are expensive in Russia and today the rumor came true. Even the corporate rates for the Chinese Embassy with the five-star Ukraine Hotel in Moscow stood at US$500 per day for a standard room, and US$850 for a suite. The price of a standard room at the four-star Slavic Hotel was US$400. The international five-star hotels like Marriott and Intercontinental would be even more expensive. A normal lunch at the Kotobuki restaurant near our hotel cost US$1500 for eight persons. A 500-ml bottle of German beer was sold at US$15, while a 330-ml bottle of Chinese Tsingtao beer cost US$8. Prices at Irkutsk and Vladivostok were about 1/3 cheaper than those in Moscow, but more expensive by 2 to 3 times than in most provincial capital cities in China.

No Russian-made cars on streets

During the several days spent in Moscow and St. Petersburg, we discovered that foreign-made cars were everywhere on the streets. Most of the cars were made in Germany and Japan, and very few cars were made in Russia. During the...

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