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Trust Arcticugol director Ildar Neverov (left in front) helped carrying the giant orthodox cross i erected in the hillside above Pyramiden in August. Screenshot from video Vkontakte / Trust Arktikugol
Svalbard
Governor orders war-glorifying cross demolished. Russian official protests on
behalf of the entire orthodox world
The
seven-meter-high orthodox cross erected in August is of importance for the
entire Christian world and a tribute to those Russians who discovered Svalbard,
according to Ildar Neverov, director of Trust Arcticugol.
By
Thomas Nilsen
October 17, 2023
In
a letter, dated September 18, the Governor of Svalbard gave a three-week
deadline to demolish the cross, alternatively appeal the decision. The
order is addressed to Trust Arcticugol, the mining company that is the
Russian state’s extended arm at the Norwegian archipelago.
It was bishop Iyakov of Naryan-Mar and Mezen who led
the ceremony to erect the giant orthodox
cross in Pyramiden, a Soviet ghost town at Svalbard. The bishop
is well-known for pushing Russia’s geopolitical ambitions in the Arctic by blessing polar outposts together
with leaders of military and security structures.
Bishop Iyakov devoted his Svalbard cross to Georgy the
Victorious, the saint seen in Russia as the protector of soldiers.
To underline the military message, a
propagandistic St. George’s Ribbon decorated the cross. This ribbon
is today a strong symbol of supporters of the Russian war against Ukraine.
Unlawful
Svalbard’s environmental protection and cultural act
is strict and the Governor’s office underlines that erection of such a
cross is not allowed without prior approval. “Trust Arcticugol is ordered
to remove the cross that has been erected without permission in a cultural
heritage, nature and outdoor area (KNF area) north of the harbor in Pyramiden,”
the letter concludes.
In his appeal letter dated October 2, obtained by the
Barents Observer, director Ildar Neverov draws historical lines back to the
16th century when the Pomors [Russian
settlers living on the White Sea coasts] started to erect crosses
along Arctic shipping lanes.
On
the shores of Spitsbergen [Russian
name of Svalbard, not to be confused with the Island Spitsbergen]
in the 18th and 19th centuries. We have information about 46 crosses from
the time,” Ildar Neverov writes to fuel his argument that the new orthodox
cross has a historic and cultural value.
He underlines that this memorial has an “increased
importance since the Orthodox cross is a symbol of Christianity and the entire
Orthodox world”.
“It is a tribute and an expression of honor to the
discoverers of Spitsbergen and the polar explorers in the Arctic,” Neverov
concludes and calls on the Governor of Svalbard to cancel the decision to
demolish the cross, which is made of oak wood from Northwest-Russia.
The dispute has also made headlines in the local
newspaper Svalbardposten.
“Legitimizes
the war”
Kari Aga Myklebost, a professor in history at UiT The
Arctic University of Norway, links the events to Moscow’s new
narratives.
“The cross with the attached St. George’s ribbon must
be seen in the context of the ongoing Russian warfare in Ukraine and the
current Russian leadership’s instrumental use of historical monuments and
narratives to legitimize the war and also to fortify Russian presence in
regions of geopolitical and strategic value to the Kremlin,” Myklebost says to
the Barents Observer.
She emphasizes that the Russian Orthodox Church is a
key ally of the Kremlin in bolstering popular support for the war against
Ukraine by blessing weapons and soldiers sent to the front.
Moscow dissatisfied
The disputed cross mirrors Russia’s growing
dissatisfaction with Norway’s ruling of the Arctic archipelago.
At the 100-year anniversary of the Svalbard Treaty in
2020, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov sent a
letter to Norwegian counterpart Ine Eriksen Søreide strongly
signaling that Russia feels discriminated. Lavrov called for “bilateral
consultations on the removal of limitations for Russian activity and structures
on the archipelago.”
Eriksen Søreide replied and made clear “Svalbard
is part of Norway [and] it is not natural that we consult with other countries
about the execution of powers in our own areas.”
Propaganda parades
The Barents Observer has previously reported about
Trust Arcticugol director Ildar Neverov staging a military-stylish Victory
Parade in Barentsburg on May 9, followed by waving the separatist flag of
the so-called Donetsk People’s Republic in Pyramiden on the same day.
On Navy Day, July 30, Russia’s Consul General in
Barentsburg, GRU-affiliated Andrei Chemerilo, led a military-inspired small
flotilla in the waters outside Barentsburg. This happened
simultaneously as Vladimir Putin praised the ambitions of the Russian
Navy at the main ceremony in St. Petersburg.
There is a pattern here, said Karen-Anna Eggen,
a Ph.D. fellow at the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies and an
expert on Russian information confrontation in the Nordic region.
“All of these incidents should be seen together
because that is how Russian influence attempts work. They do not have to be big
events, but rather slowly normalizing Russian presence and rhetoric using
whatever means available to, in this case, undermine Norwegian sovereignty on
Svalbard.”
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