Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 2 – After
occupying Crimea and facing opposition from the Crimean Tatars, Moscow has stepped
up its repression of the numerically small peoples of the North, sought to gain
control of their organizations, and taken steps to cut them off from support
from abroad, according to Dmitry Berezhkov.
Berezhkov earlier was vice president
of Russia’s Association of the Numerically Small Indigenous Peoples of the
North but who was forced to flee to Norway where he now is a student at Tromso
University after successfully fighting Moscow’s request that he be extradited
to face charges for extremism (barentsobserver.com/ru/politika/2013/06/dmitriya-berezhkova-vypustili-iz-tyurmy-15-06).
The “Narody Rossii” portal has now
posted paper he delivered at Tromso in November on “The Influence of Changes in
the Political Atmosphere of Russia on the Indigenous Peoples of the Russian
North” (narodyrossii.com/dmitrij-berezhkov-posle-kryma-vlasti-neobosnovanno-opasayutsya-i-malochislennyh-narodov/).
Berezhkov’s report provides one of
the most comprehensive and balanced assessments of the situation the
numerically small peoples of the North face, a group that is vastly more
important than their numbers might suggest because they increasingly dominate
the populations of many regions in the northern third of the Russian
Federation.
After Putin returned to the
presidency in 2012, the Northern Peoples activist says, “the domestic political
order of the day in Russia acquired a repressive character,” with the Kremlin
moving from “soft authoritarianism toward a totalitarian political system,”
something that could not but affect the numerically small peoples of the North.
Moscow’s law on foreign agents was
used by Russian officials to close or reduce the activity of various
organizations in the North, he points out. And the “pro-government” media began
to attack the leaders of the indigenous peoples, claiming that they were
working on behalf of other governments to destroy Russia.
Among the steps the Russian
authorities have taken has been intervention in the elections to the leading
bodies of the organizations of the indigenous peoples, including the Association
of Indigenous Numerically Small Peoples of the North, Siberia and the Far East,
and the transformation of them into “classical GONGOs,” that is,
government-organized NGOs.
The situation became worse,
Berezhkov says, after the Crimean Anschluss because Moscow officials concluded
that the opposition of the Crimean Tatars to that action reflected attitudes
that must exist among the numerically small peoples and that the latter thus represent
a Trojan horse-type threat to Russia that Western governments might use.
Such an extrapolation of the Crimean
Tatar situation is “quite absurd” given the small numbers and wide dispersion
of the peoples of the North and the current “disorganization” of their
movements, Berezhkov says. But despite that absurdity, it is now clear that
such a view is guiding Moscow’s actions.
The central government is working to
cut ties between the numerically small peoples of the North with their
co-ethnics abroad and with international rights groups, and it is imposing particular
limits on contacts between trans-border peoples like the Inuits, the Aleuts,
and the Saamis.
At the same time, Berezhkov says, Russian
businesses active in the North have used the suspiciousness of the government
as yet another excuse to elbow aside the peoples of the North from access to
the natural resources of these peoples.
The activist says
that everyone needs to be prepared for three processes that will unfold in
Russia. First of all, Berezhkov says, the confrontation between Russia and the
West will intensify, and Moscow will further suppress civil society at home,
including among the numerically small peoples of the North.
Second, because
such repression is likely to last for a long time since there is no immediate
threat to Putin on the horizon and that he has the capacity to suppress any
challenge to his rule. And third, both
those inside Russia and those abroad need to recognize that sanctions are
hurting the Putin regime but are not likely to lead to its demise anytime soon.
It is thus
important to prepare for the long haul and to think defending what one can
until Putin leaves the scene. But it is also important to recognize that “unfortunately,
the experience of other countries such as Iraq, Libya, and Yugoslavia show that
the destruction of a totalitarian regime does not always lead to an improvement
of the situation in the country” involved.
However much many
would like it to, Berezhkov says, “the end of the Putin era will not mean an
automatic transition to democracy.” Recognizing that danger, he continues, must
be the basis for thinking about the future. The numerically small peoples of
the North have long experience with dealing with repression and one can hope
that they “will be able to survive the difficult burden of the Putin regime.”
If they can
continue to do so, he concludes, “then the indigenous peoples will live in the future.”
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