Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 10 – In its effort to
maintain and tighten control over those it sees as its domestic enemies, the
Putin regime is moving step by step to violate the provisions of the Russian
constitution in ways that may seem almost anodyne but in fact have far-reaching
consequences, Vladimir Pastukhov says.
In a “Novaya gazeta” column
published yesterday, the St. Antony’s College scholar says that the new
imposing penalties on Russians who do not declare that they have dual
citizenship is a considerably greater threat to their rights than it may appear
at first glance to Russians or others concerned about constitutional liberties
(novayagazeta.ru/columns/63969.html).
Among these threats is the fact that
the law creates a class of people who are treated differently on the basis of
some “accidental and external sign.”
That is “a serious and, one can say, historic choice in favor of the
renewal of the [Soviet] practice of issuing class-based laws, the goal of which
was repression toward particular social strata or groups of the population.”
That may not seem obvious because
the law stresses the need to make declarations about dual citizenship rather
than the rights of those Russian citizens who have permission from other
countries to live there, Pastukhov says. But he adds that these are ‘two big
differences’” and need to be examined closely.
A residency permit, unlike dual
citizenship, “does not create any political rights for those who have such
permission and does not impose on them any political obligations.” Consequently,
“there is no constitutional-legal collision” between the status of a Russian
citizen in Russia and the status of a Russian citizen who has permission to
live in another country.
Because the new Putin law treats the
two things as equivalent, it “violates the principle of the equality of all
citizens before the law” as declared by Article 19 of the Russian Constitution
by defining as subject to special treatment members of an entire group rather
than individuals who may have violated the law.
But that is not the only
constitutional problem with the new law, Pastukhov says. It says such people must register their dual
citizenship or residence permits within 60 days of the new law going into
effect and that they can do so only on the territory of the Russian Federation
and not at an embassy or consulate abroad.
If enforced, that provision will
require many to make an unplanned and possibly expensive return visit to the
Russian Federation to do so.
Those constitutional violations are
serious enough, the St. Antony’s College scholar says, but the new law reflects
an even more dangerous trend toward the restoration of Soviet-style
restrictions on the rights and freedoms of Russian citizens and as such is “cancerogenic”
and threatens to “metasticize.”
Pastukhov points out that no long
ago, information became public about an individual who was denied the right to
take part in a judicial selection “only on the basis that the aspirant had
relatives who constantly live beyond the borders of Russia,” a restriction that
recalls Soviet limitations on those with relatives abroad or who themselves had
lived in occupied territories.
Such things, he continues, make the
new law part of the kind of laws “so popular both in Europe and in Russia at
the beginning of the 20th century about the limitation of the rights
of class alien elements or about the limitation of the rights of national
minorities.”
Some observers have suggested that
the new law is the first step toward restoring the Soviet practice of requiring
that citizens get exit visas. That may
be so, but Pastukhov says that he does not see a direct connection between this
legislation and “the intention of the state to close the borders,” at least not
yet.
Rather, he suggests, it “bears a
fiscal-repressive” quality toward “a social group which the ruling regime
considers as politically unfavorable,” those who want to use their foreign
residence to escape Russian taxes on the sale of their residences in Russia.
Given Moscow’s problems with budget shortfalls, that is clearly a goal.
“But this, of course, is not the
most important thing,” Pastukhov continues.
That is the impact of the law on the Russian middle class “which is
drawn to Western liberal values” and is viewed by the regime as “culturally
alien” and “also on the fifth column, but not the one about which everyone
speaks but about its members in the ranks” of the regime itself.
According to the Oxford researcher, the
Kremlin wants to force employees of the regime to get rid of their foreign
properties by creating a new source of threat to themselves lest they become
affected by Western values and even think about opposing the top leadership.
Such a move is entirely consistent with Putin’s current “mobilizational model.”
Because the new law is so patently
unconstitutional, the Russian courts should quickly declare it null and void,
but they are unlikely to do so, Pastukhov says.
As a result, “nothing remains” to those with permission to work and live
beyond the borders of Russia “except to don a yellow star of the hero of the
new Russia and wear it proudly.”
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