Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 12 – Many commentators
write as if changing borders was a simple process that only requires a decision
from above to be realized, but a series of cases in Ukraine and one in Pskov
oblast highlight the difficulties involved, not least of which the opposition
of current officials and residents to any shift.
In Ukraine, Kyiv has called for
uniting territorial units, but as Elena Bogun points out in “Delovaya stolitsa,”
“far from all oblast councils have agreed to approve plans for the formation of
the territories of self-standing communities” and many which have not yet taken
a position may oppose such plans as well (dsnews.ua/society/pochemu-obshchiny-ne-hotyat-obedinyatsya-12062015174600
).
Ukrainian officials in the capital
are now seeking new legislation that will allow them to ignore the decisions of
the oblast councils and simply order the changes Kyiv wants. But it is not clear that that will solve the
problem, the journalist says. Indeed, it
may breed even more resistance because many in the regions see the entire
process as forced rather than voluntary.
Kyiv’s consolidation drive,
enshrined in a law adopted on February 5, was triggered by a Council of Europe
report that said that Ukraine should radically reorganize its regional and
local governments: “Besides the existing 27 oblasts, there will remain only
about 150 districts instead of the current 490 and approximately 1500
communities instead of the current 10,279.”
The law’s goals are laudable, Bogun
says, and “the problems which it is intended to solve deserve attention.” But consolidation is no easy thing. Many local officials will lose their jobs,
many local people will lose their access to these officials, and costs may rise
given that Kyiv has promised more money will flow rather than less, although
how that can happen is unclear.
And because it isn’t clear, local
officials and local people are opposed. As a result, on April 8, the Ukrainian
Council of Ministers approved a set of rules under the terms of which oblast administrations
were required “within a month” to develop projects for unification and to
present these plans for approval.
This created what Bogun calls “a
paradoxical situation: the organs of executive power are developing plans for ‘the
voluntary’ unification of territorial communities. Somehow,” she says, “this
recalls the history of the ‘voluntary’ creation of collective farms.” Not surprisingly, it is being resisted.
Ukraine is far from the only
post-Soviet state that has adopted this program in the name of saving money
during a period of budgetary stringency – and also far from the only one whose
subordinate officials and populations are resisting such measures. While these fights are typically ignored in
Moscow, they matter intensely to the people involved.
A court case in Pskov oblast highlights
this reality. Local people and local
officials have blocked Pskov’s effort to unite two districts in the Novorzhevsk
rayon, and consequently, the oblast authorities have turned to the courts in
the hopes of forcing the issue. The result, however, has been the generation of
even more opposition(gubernia.pskovregion.org/number_744/06.php).
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