Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 20 – Even before
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev this week signed off on the creation of
a ministry for North Caucasus affairs, the number of officials in federal
bureaucracies in that region exceeded the number of republic-level official by “almost
twice,” according to Enver Kisriyev, a leading specialist on the region.
Kisriyev, a senior scholar at the Academy
of Sciences’ Center for Regional and Civilizational Research, said that the
time had come “to leave the North Caucasus in peace, to remove the army of
bureaucrats, [and] to allow the North Caucasus to choose by a democratic path
its own leaders from the village, district and city up to the level of
republics” (nazaccent.ru/content/12057-ekspert-nado-ostavit-severnyj-kavkaz-v.html).
He
argued that local people know local conditions better than any outsider and
that the people they choose will be able to enforce the laws. But with the creation
of the new ministry and with Putin’s elimination of elections at ever more
levels, the region and Russia as a whole are moving in just the opposite
direction (nazaccent.ru/content/12052-premer-ministr-utverdil-polozhenie-o-ministerstve-po.html).
Although Kisriyev does not address
the broader consequences of this trend, it has at least three major
consequences, all of which will make it more not less difficult for the central
authorities to pacify the re-integrate this restive region.
First, because so many Moscow
bureaucracies are involved, it is inevitable that their respective
representatives on the scene will at a minimum compete with one another,
delivering mixed messages to the population and working intentionally or not at
cross-purposes, all of which will lead to a further deterioration of government
effectiveness there.
Second, because Moscow has such a
heavy official presence, local officials are likely to feel less responsible
rather than more. They can always
deflect responsibility onto the Russian officials at least in the eyes of the
local populations, and they may even be interested in supporting or at least
not opposing challenges to Russian as opposed to their own rule.
And third, by signaling that it has
little confidence in local officials and by extension the non-Russian peoples
there, the current Russian government is creating a potential nightmare for
itself. On the one hand, it will be ever less able to control the situation by
drawing on the expertise of officials who know the local language and culture.
On the other – and far more seriously
– it is changing the pattern of inter-ethnic relations in ways that are
inimical to continued Russian control. In the past, the central authorities
following Stalin generally arranged things so that the anger of non-Russians
was directed at other non-Russians rather than at Russians in the first
instance.
But now, with such a large and
growing Russian apparatus in the region, that will inevitably change and the
non-Russians may becoming increasingly inclined to view the country in the
borders of which they live as an empire and the Russians not as fellow
sufferers but as the source of their problems.
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