Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 30 – The efforts of
the government of Trans-Baikal kray to rent land to China and Mongolia have
sparked debates in the Russian media about whether subjects of the federation
should be able to conduct business in this way as they have been doing since
the late Soviet period (regions.ru/news/2553417/).
Typically,
such agreements have been about relatively small issues; and no one in Moscow
believes that they should occur without clearance from the capital. But now one Russian analyst, S.A. Balashov of
the Sulakshin Center, is arguing that all such agreements should be tightly
controlled lest they become “a threat to Russia’s sovereignty.”
In
a commentary on Politobzor.net, Balashov says that it is imperative that the
central Russian government recognize this fact and understand that it must ban
all such accords (politobzor.net/show-58032-regionalnye-mezhdunarodnye-soglasheniya-ugroza-suverenitetu-rossii.html http://regions.ru/news/2553417/).
Russian legislation governing such
agreements is extensive, but it is full of “gaps” and “shortcomings” that some
regions exploit in order to sell off land and other goods to foreigners in
order to get what Balashov calls “’easy money,’” a pattern increasingly common
at this time of economic stringency.
At present, Russian law specifies
that agreements between regions and foreign countries are not treaties “because
the regions of the Russian Federation are not recognized as subjects of
international public law.” And it calls on regions who want to sign any
agreement to clear them with Moscow.
Most such agreements are harmless,
of “a general character,” and “about ‘friendship and cooperation,” he says, but
“the problem is that many accords lack clear formulations which have to be
filled in later by real concrete content,” that is, content supplied after
Moscow has given its OK to them.
Indeed, Balashov says, the problem
is with the coordination procedure. At present, Moscow has only 20 days to
review the agreements before it goes into force, and the regions have a great
deal of flexibility as far as to which Russian government ministry they appeal
to. Thus, they can sometimes play one off against another.
But there is an even bigger problem:
At present, there are no penalties for regions which fail to submit their
agreements with foreign countries for review, and consequently, many regional
heads ignore the legal requirement to do so. Of the accords between regions and
foreign countries now in force, “about 500” have been registered, but 1500
haven’t.
That means, Balashov says, that “75
percent of the agreements” may be modified by the regions after Moscow has
given nominal clearance, opening the way to abuse.
Draft legislation would correct some
of these problems, he says. It would specify to whom the regions must apply, it
would give Moscow more time to respond, and it would impose penalties on those
regional officials who did not submit the original or any changes for review.
Most important, it would specify that no agreement would enter into force until
Moscow agreed.
Given that many regions want to rent
land or sell natural resources to foreigners to get “’easy money,’” Balashov
continues, changes in the rules governing such rentals and sales also need to
be made, including a requirement that no such agreement could enter into force
without the prior written consent of the federal Ministry of Economic
Development.
Unless and until such changes are
made, these agreements have the potential to threaten the sovereignty of the
Russian Federation, the analyst concludes.
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