
Italy cancels concert by Putin ally Gergiev
The concert scheduled for Sunday in the 18th-century palace near Naples caused a heated debate in Italy, was slammed by Ukraine and led to calls for protests by Russia's exiled opposition.
Gergiev has not condemned Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, a stance for which he was fired from the Munich Philharmonic in March 2022. He has since been shunned by the West and has not played concerts in Europe.
Days of uncertainty over the concert ended with the abrupt announcement on Monday.
'The directorate of the Royal Palace of Caserta has ordered the cancellation of the symphony concert conducted by Valery Gergiev, scheduled as part of the Un'Estate da Re festival for July 27,' said a Caserta palace statement.
It gave no official reason for the decision.
Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of late Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny, lauded the announcement as 'good news'.
'No artist who supports the current dictatorship in Russia should be welcomed in Europe,' Navalnaya wrote on X.
Navalnaya's team had campaigned against the concert and said in a statement: 'Putin's pals should not be touring Europe like nothing happened.'
Russia's state TASS news agency said the 72-year-old maestro was not informed of the decision, quoting Gergiev as saying: 'I do not have this information.'
'Scandalous situation'
Gergiev is the director of Russia's Bolshoi and Mariinsky theatres, and before the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, he regularly played in leading Western theatres.
While Kremlin critics lauded the cancellation, Moscow's ambassador to Italy called it a 'scandalous situation' that was part of Western politicians' 'policy of 'cancelling' Russian culture'.
In a statement on the embassy's Facebook page, Alexei Paramonov said it was 'sad' to watch Italy 'subordinate its cultural policy to the demands of Ukrainians and other immigrants'.
Italian Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli – who had warned that the concert risked turning into a propaganda event – said the cancellation was 'common sense' and aimed at 'protecting the values of the free world'.
Ukraine on Sunday urged organisers to drop the performance, calling Gergiev 'Putin's mouthpiece' who should not be welcomed anywhere 'as long as Russian forces continue to commit atrocities' in Ukraine.
Recognised as one of the world's leading orchestra leaders, Gergiev is known for conducting epic symphonies of Russian classical music by Pyotr Tchaikovsky, among other successes in Western opera houses.
The conductor has stayed silent on Russia's invasion of Ukraine and mostly out of the public eye since 2022, but has played concerts in Asia.
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