Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 19 – Although a
Duma committee has now rejected a United Russia proposal to impose criminal
penalties on any calls for separatism, the Communist Party of the Russian
Federation has introduced a proposal to do the same thing, arguing that
liberals are using separatism as a political tool against the national
interests of Russia.
In a press release yesterday, the
KPRF said that a law making any call for separatism a crime was needed because “many
representatives of the liberal portion of the political spectrum not infrequently
use separatism instrumentally,” thus making it unclear whether they are
liberals using separatism or separatists using liberalism (kprf.ru/dep/gosduma/activities/125384.html).
This situation
must be ended, the Russian communists say, and their bill calls for fines of up
to 60,000 rubles (2000 US dollars) for individuals and 300,000 rubles (15,000
US dollars) for Russian citizens who disseminate separatist ideas including via
the Internet. The KPRF measure sets three years imprisonment as the most severe
punishment for what it defines as a crime.
Those punishments are significantly
less than the ones called for in the bill that was offered by several United
Russia deputies and that has now been killed in committee. The United Russia
version called for truly draconian punishments of up to 20 years imprisonment
for separatist activity.
The KPRF press release said that the
Communists “do not intend” to have such a law become “a guillotine to be
applied according to the taste” of those in power. “But at the same time, the
provisions of the bill must be strict, not subject to misinterpretation and
capable of depending the interests of the country.”
Two
aspects of the KPRF proposal are worth noting. On the one hand, the fact that
it has been made at all shows that the Moscow political class thinks there is
support for such a measure even if it is clear that the original proposal
sought to impose punishments far beyond what its members thought appropriate.
Consequently,
this may be the beginning of serious talks about what an actual law in this
area should look like rather than just a public relations stunt.
And on the other, the KPRF argument that
liberals and separatists are interpenetrated shows that the Communists like the
members of the ruling United Russia Party who offered the original bill view the
struggle against separatism as a useful cover for struggling against other
things they don’t like.
That
in turn means that in this area as in so many others, the declared purpose of
what the Russian authorities are doing may be far less important than the ways
in which they apply any such measure, yet another indication of the weakness of
Russian jurisprudence and an approach that undermines any hope for genuine rule
of law in that country anytime soon.
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