Brussels Blog (Tony Barber): The European Union's leaders travel next month to Khanty-Mansiysk for a summit with Dmitry Medvedev, the new Russian president. Will they find time, I wonder, in this booming western Siberian oil town to stop off at the crossroads of Sverdlova and Pionerskaya streets? They should do. There, in front of School Number 5, they will find a recently erected memorial to the victims of Stalin's repressions - at least, so the town's government website says.
The existence of this memorial reminds us to think twice before rushing to judge today's Russia. The country clearly moved to a more authoritarian, centralised form of rule under Vladimir Putin. Civil liberties were curtailed. But many Russians remain as determined as ever to expose the truth about their country's bloodstained communist past. These days, Stalin cannot be airbrushed from Russia's history as easily as he used to airbrush his opponents.



