Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 10 – A resident
of Orenburg has brought a suit against the Siberian Power Union, seeking to
have it declared “extremist,” and thus subject to banning, an action that
members of that group is simply a way for the Russian authorities to continue
their persecution of their organization.
On Thursday, Aleksandr Budnikov, the
founder of the Siberian Power Union (“Sibirsky Derezhny Soyuz”), was notified
that this suit had been lodged against him and his group for distribution of
extremist materials on the Internet challenging the current structure of the
Russian Federation. The first court date will be February 18 (globalsib.com/16776/).
At
its founding conference in Novosibirsk on March 23, 2012, the SDS as its
leaders typically refer to it announced that the group has three goals:
“liberation from the political, ideological and economic diktat of Moscow,”
establishment of a Siberian Power as an independent subject of international
law, and “the formation of a Union of [Ethnic] Russian Lands” (globalsib.com/14099/).
During
the conference, Budnikov and his colleagues discussed “the procedure for
recalling” their representatives to the government of the Russian Federation
and transferring their authority to the Supreme Council of the SDS
which,”according to legal norms,” would thus “come out from under the
jurisdiction” of the Russian Federation.”
Budnikov in his speech to the
delegates last yeaer noted that “all who take part in the activity of the
movement must be repared for pressure and for being called separatists by the
existing regie since any regional initiatives except those that are pro-Kremlin
will be persecuted and suppressed.
That was certainly the case of the pre-existing
regional organizations from which the SDS sprung, including the Slavic Militant
Brotherhood (lobalsib.com/7297/). And Budnikov
noted that four criminal charges had been brought against him for his activities
up to that time, three of which he said had been dismissed while one remained
open.
At present, the SDS appears to have
fewer than 25 members, and it has attracted attention only for its efforts to
build a “capital” city in the Altay to serve as “a center to unite
representatives of many confessions and religious doctrines free from dogmas
and ideological barriers” and to issue special Siberian currency (http://globalsib.com/15826/).
Like many such groups at the margins
in the Russian Federation, the SDS maintains a website -- sibpower.com – and regularly
posts clips on Youtube and other social sites. It is thus less important as a
movement than it is as an expression if in extreme form of how some Russians in
Siberia may feel and as a measure of the paranoia some in the Russian regime
feel.
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