Paul Goble
Staunton,
January 18 – The Social Chamber yesterday held a discussion on “The Nationalist
Danger in Russia: The Results of 2011. Trends, Prospects, and Countermeasures,”
a session at which many views on that subject were aired and which has
attracted a great deal of attention in the Moscow media.
The main
presentation was made by Valery Engel, the deputy chairman of “World Without
Nazism, in which he outlined the findings and conclusions of Semyon Charny’s
report on “The Social Bases and manifestations of Nationalistic Attitudes in
the Russian Federation” in 2011 (worldwithoutnazism.wordpress.com/monitor/russia/2011-overview/).
According
to Engel, the number of extreme right-wing Russian nationalists itoday is some
20 to 24 thousand, but despite their numbers, they are now seeking to have an
impact on the country’s power structures and even penetrate them rather than
engage in easily suppressed violent action (www.sova-center.ru/racism-xenophobia/discussions/2012/01/d23436/).
He
concluded his pessimistic report by suggesting that “the growth of the aggressive
activity of nationalistic leaders in Russia is taking place on the background
of [and clearly because of] the weakness displayed by the liberal wing” of
Russian public opinion (oprf.ru/press/news/2012/newsitem/16412).
Another
participant, Nikolay Svanidze, the chairman of the Chamber’s Commission on
Interethnic Relations and Freedom, suggested that the radical right had already
been successful in penetrating the government and that Dmitry Rogozin, former
Russian ambassador to NATO, is an example of that threat.
He added, “Moskovskie novosti” reports today,
that “Russian society may be presented with a choice between Rogozin and
Aleksey Navalny who is inclined to use ‘the popular resource’ of nationalism,”
noting that the radicals view themselves as potential “brides” of whatever
group will offer them the most (mn.ru/society_ethnic/20120118/309942823.html).
Aleksandr
Verkhovsky, the director of the SOVA Center, said that his views in large
measure coincide with those of Engel. He said that the police have been able to
reduce thenumber of criminal actions by the extreme nationalists, prompting the
latter to turn to legal political action while maintaining “anti-system
rhetoric.”
He added
that “at present, Russia cannot completely exclude nationalism from the life of
society, but he argued that it is very important that political leaders ensure
that the Russian population understands just what a nation is. Dmitry Medvedev
and Vladimir Putin were taking steps in this direction a year ago but since
then have cut back on this “almost to nothing.”
Verkhovsky
was followed by Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin, the outspoken head of the
social-relations department of the Moscow Patriarchate. He argued that nationalists have the right to
speak out because “liberal democracy is not a universal recipe” for solving all
problems. Instead, he called for “uniting” Russians against “xenophobia and
separatism.”
The
Orthodox churchman added that “it is necessary to solve the problems that ‘patriotic
organizations’ are raising,” including the lack of definition of the status of
the ethnic Russian people and “the difficulty of its self-organization” as a
traditionally evolved ethno-social community (www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/1962293.html).
Vladiir
Zorin, a former Russian minister for nationality affairs, pointedly asked why
Engel and the others were not talking about migration patterns since “it is
evident,” he said, “that precisely the growth of migration pressure in the big
cities is also a cause of the growth of tension” in Russian society (mn.ru/society_ethnic/20120118/309942823.html).
Other
speakers provided additional perspectives. Aleksandr Sokolov, a member of the Social
Chamber, said that “in practice, all opposition forces in Russia are playing
the nationalist card” and that in the current presidential campaign, there is
likely to be “an outburst of nationalist rhetoric,” a development he called on
Vladimir Putin to condemn.
Georgy
Fedorov, the president of the Center of Social and Poltiical Research, noted
that it is extremely difficult to “separate out nationalists who are capable of
negotiation.” But he said liberals must
try, rather than as is often the case “toying” with nationalists as Boris
Akunin did recently in his conversation with Navalny.
And finally, political scientist
Mikhail Tulsky said it is also a mistake to brand everyone in the government or
out who can be accused of one or another form of xenophobia to be a member of
some kind of “party of nationalists.”
Failure to distinguish between such people and the real radical right
overstates the power of the latter (mn.ru/politics/20120117/309942626.html).
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