Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 27 – The Moscow and
Western media have devoted enormous attention to the few dozen Russian
officials who have been blocked from visiting a few countries in the West, but
they have largely ignored the terrifying plans of the Putin regime to keep some
five million Russian citizens from travelling outside the Russian Federation.
In a post on Ekho Moskvy today,
Vladimir Ryzhkov, an historian and liberal politician, says that “the explosive
growth in the number” of Russians whose own government is preventing them have
traveling abroad is “an important part of the Kremlin’s new course of gradually
self-isolation” of Russia (echo.msk.ru/blog/rizhkov/1328544-echo/).
The foreign travel ban Moscow has
imposed “on Russian ‘siloviki’” helps generate more “anti-Western paranoia” and
a broader crackdown on independent thought, he suggests, because “cultivating
the image” of Russia as “a besieged fortress, surrounded by enemies,” is easier
if such people are “deprived of the opportunity to see the surrounding world
with their own eyes.”
Moreover,
Ryzhkov argues, it reflects an effort by the powers that be to limit brain
drain and capital flight, both of which represent an increasing threat to
Russia’s rulers.
In Soviet times, “the entire
population of the enormous country” was prevented from travelling abroad. “The border was under an iron lock and
key.” The elimination of that
restriction was a major step forward after 1991, Ryzhkov continues, but “now a
restoration of these Soviet practices is proceeding step by step.”
The first to be placed under these new
restrictions were FSB officers, who lost the right to constitutional right to
travel freely in 2010. Then, employees
of the magistracy were restricted in the same way as were those who owed taxes
or bank loans or had failed to pay for certain other services.
Now,
Ryzhkov says, “the possibility of introducing such a ban” on others is being discussed,
including restrictions on all those who fail to pay traffic fines, draft
resisters, or those with access to classified information. Already as of April
2014, the total number of those who can’t leave Russia has been estimated to be
four million people, “the overwhelming majority of whom have no relation to
secrets or issues of national security.”
That number means that “almost five percent” of
Russia’s adult population – one in every 20 citizens – now is banned from
leaving the country, something “unprecedented for the entire post-Soviet
history” of the country. And the actual
number almost certainly is even larger than that, given that it certainly
includes many who work in the defense establishment.
The
policy is not only offensive and wrong but likely to be counter-productive given the value Russians place on gaining the
right after 1991 to travel abroad.
Ryzhkov notes that in the 1950s, millions of East Germans fled their
country to the West. The response was the Berlin Wall, the isolation of the
GDR, and the latter’s ultimate collapse.
In
the course of the last 20 years, some four to five million Russian citizens
have left the country, “including 20,000 doctors of science. “Given growing economic difficulties, the
tightening of screws and the restrictions on freedom,” it is likely to become
ever more problematic for the Kremlin to hold the rest. But bans are clearly steps
in that direction.
No comments:
Post a Comment