Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 18 – Vladimir Putin’s
efforts to exclude the people of the Russian Federation from voting on the
heads of federal subjects may be backfiring because it is leading some citizens
there to take to the streets to demand that their current regional rulers be
ousted and gaining confidence in their power, a development that can hardly
please the Kremlin.
Two such protests-as-substitutes-for-elections
have just occurred, one in the Republic of Karelia and a second in Perm kray. In Petrozavodsk, 150 Karelians took part in a
follow-up meeting to demand the retirement or ouster of incumbent Karelian
Republic head Aleksandr Khudilaynen (7x7-journal.ru/item/57374).
Two weeks ago, Karelians assembled
in front of the republic government headquarters to demand the release of two
Yabloko activists and the departure of Khudilaynen. “The demands of the picketers have not
changed,” a blogger said, but “what has changes is the attitude of the people:
Unlike at the meeting two weeks ago, there were many more smiles and jokes.”
The reason is that Khudilaynen’s
regime met one of their demands: Olga Zaletsky and Aleksandr Kornilova have
been released; and the demonstrators are “certain” that their activism and
nothing else led to that outcome. But Khudilaynen is still in office and there
are no elections. As a result, organizers say, “mass actions in the Karelian
capital will continue.”
Sergey Popkov, an ecologist and
civic activist, says that “all of us together will mark the May holidays and
the Day of victory, and then we will continue our protest campaign. We still
don’t know how the new republic law on meetings will work … but “the more the
authorities attempt to prevent protests … the greater will be the resonance.”
He adds that from now on, “the
activity of the protesters will be coordinated by a public committee ‘For the
Retirement of the Current Governor’ that was set up a few days ago.” Its
membership include “about ten people, including public figures and deputies,
journalists and entrepreneurs.”
“Our goal is the conduct of free,
independent and honest elections for the leader of the region. For us what is
important is the holding of elections and not the specific candidates who will
take part in them. It is important that residents of the republic take
responsibility for the life in the region.”
At the same time, he says, there are many possible challengers.
Meanwhile, a
meeting of an estimated 220 to 400 people in Perm took place to complain about
rising prices, unfilled promises from the government, and problems with
industry there and to demand that the kray’s governor, Viktor Basargin, leave
office (interfax.ru/russia/437059 and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=55326C58D326F).
Sergey Ukhov, one of the organizers
of the meeting, says he and others taking part had complained to the police about
a group of unidentified people who sought to disrupt the action by handing out
placards containing “negative information about certain of the organizers of
the action.”
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