Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 10 – The failure of
the Russian authorities to bring to justice those responsible for a series of
murders of policemen in the southern Russian city of Novocherkassk has spawned
a series of theories, all of which appear plausible in the absence of intense
media coverage and evidence presented in court, according to an “Osobaya
bukhva” journalist.
According to Vladimir Titov, some
are inclined to blame “partisans,” others extremists of various kinds, still
others bandits, and yet a fourth group people with other, unspecified
grievances against the authorities as a whole (specletter.com/obcshestvo/2013-06-07/pritsel-opravdyvaet-sredstva.html).
Titov’s article is important not
only as a description of how rumors arise but also as an indication of the ways
in which, in the absence of a freer flow of information, both the authorities
and the population can and will choose whom to blame, regardless of what the
facts of the case may eventually turn out to be.
As he suggests, the list of possible
perpetrators underscores that “there are so many unresolved contradictions” in
the country, “not only between the authorities and the people but among various
strata and groups of the population,” and that although “there is no civil war
in Russia” now, the population is unintentionally being prepared to move in
that direction.
What is most striking about the
recent killings of policemen in Novocherkassk, Titov argues, is “the absence of
media attention to what is taking place.”
The press is “ignoring this theme.” Government propagandists are playing
it down. Local analysts are “silent.” And not surprising, the police don’t want
to talk about it either.
Such a lack of information has sparked
various and often wild rumors that more often appear to reflect the
preconceptions of those spreading them than any facts on the ground, the “Osobaya
bukhva” journalist says, leading to cynicism and the believe that people are
killing the police only because they are representatives of those in power.
These views in turn have led ever
more people in Novocherkassk to conclude that they face a problem like the Primorsky
partisans of 2010 or Islamist terrorists or something else, with the absence of
media coverage and of official findings having exactly the opposite effect that
the supporters of such silence hope for.
If there is not more media attention
and if the authorities do not bring those responsible to trial, then, Titov
suggests, ever more Russians will conclude that there is a war against the authorities
going on and it is a battle that at least at present, those authorities are not
winning, a conclusion with potentially fateful consequences.
On the one hand, it could radicalize
ever more of the population which has its own grievances against those
authorities. But on the other, it could lead to demands for an even more
draconic crackdown in the name of the defense of “law and order,” something
some authorities may want but that the Novocherkassk killings suggest they may
not be able to carry out.
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