diff -Naur mailman-2.1.18-1/Mailman/MailList.py mailman-2.1.18-1_patched/Mailman/MailList.py
--- mailman-2.1.18-1/Mailman/MailList.py	2014-05-06 20:43:56.000000000 +0400
+++ mailman-2.1.18-1_patched/Mailman/MailList.py	2014-11-04 15:57:06.832636147 +0300
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@
 import shutil
 import socket
 import urllib
-import cPickle
+import pickle as cPickle
 
 from cStringIO import StringIO
 from UserDict import UserDict
diff -Naur mailman-2.1.18-1/misc/paths.py.in mailman-2.1.18-1_patched/misc/paths.py.in
--- mailman-2.1.18-1/misc/paths.py.in	2014-05-06 20:43:56.000000000 +0400
+++ mailman-2.1.18-1_patched/misc/paths.py.in	2014-11-04 15:55:49.594941540 +0300
@@ -66,14 +66,14 @@
 # In a normal interactive Python environment, the japanese.pth and korean.pth
 # files would be imported automatically.  But because we inhibit the importing
 # of the site module, we need to be explicit about importing these codecs.
-if not jaok:
-    import japanese
+#if not jaok:
+#    import japanese
 # As of KoreanCodecs 2.0.5, you had to do the second import to get the Korean
 # codecs installed, however leave the first import in there in case an upgrade
 # changes this.
-if not kook:
-    import korean
-    import korean.aliases
+#if not kook:
+#    import korean
+#    import korean.aliases
 # Arabic and Hebrew (RFC-1556) encoding aliases. (temporary solution)
 import encodings.aliases
 encodings.aliases.aliases.update({