Paul Goble
Staunton, June 25 – The Russian
government has always understood the interest of the three Finno-Ugric
countries – Finland, Hungary and Estonia – in the Finno-Ugric peoples within
the borders of the Russian Federation as “a pretext for putting pressure on
Russia when the situation requires,” according to Alina Sergeyeva, a St.
Petersburg commentator.
Estonia has been the most outspoken, she
suggests, but Finland has been the most effective because it understands that “sanctions
come and go but neighbors remain” and therefore seeks to work in issues that
will not antagonize Moscow as it continues to promote its own “soft power” in
this area (regnum.ru/news/polit/1936580.html).
Sergeyeva says that as a result,
there is not going to be any “hue and cry” from Finland about Finno-Ugric
matters inside Russia. But the very fact that this article appeared and its
obvious messages to Tallinn and Budapest shows how sensitive the Finno-Ugric
issue now is for Moscow and how concerned the Russian government is to set
limits to outside influence on it.
To a greater degree than the two other
Finno-Ugric countries, she says, Finland traditionally has focused on issues in
this area, including economic growth, border cooperation and ecology and
provided substantial sums of money to the numerically small Finno-Ugric peoples
of the Russian Federation that are less likely to anger Moscow.
“Today,”
Sergeyeva continues, Finland has developed “systemic and quality work not only
for the support of Finno-Ugric peoples living in Russia but also by its
official presence on territories needed for the preservation of the state
security of the country” with a consulate general in St. Petersburg, a
consulate in Petrozavodsk, and a consular office in Murmansk.”
Finland’s
involvement in Finno-Ugric matters in Russia while impressive in its extent,
the St. Petersburg writer says, have passed “practically unnoticed in the
public space” because “unlike Estonia,” Finland goes about its business of
promoting its “soft power” without loud public declarations.
In
the 1990s, she says, Russia did not give “priority” to “the problem of the preservation
of the ethno-cultural uniqueness of the Finno-Ugric peoples,” and consequently,
Finland stepped in, first with a 1992 inter-government agreement and then
beginning in 1994 and lasting through 2012 a 353,000 euro (350,000 US dollar)
program each year.
Those funds were spent on the publication of educational materials
in the Finno-Ugric languages, translations, dissemination of information to
those communities, research efforts and cooperative work with museums as well
as seminars, conferences, and educational opportunities for Finno-Ugric
peoples.
But as Sergeyeva delicately puts it, “in recent years, in
Russia has begun a tightening of control over foreign financing of public
projects. Domestic NGOs which receive money from abroad are now not in fashion,”
something she explains by pointing to “the change in the foreign political
situation in the world.”
She says that Russia has developed its own “system”
for supporting NGOs and that “Finno-Ugric organizations can avail themselves of
the opportunity to carry out their projects from funds out of the budget of the
country and socially responsible business” now that they aren’t getting as much
money from abroad.
In the new environment, Helsinki has
created a new mechanism for supporting its co-ethnics in the Russian
Federation. This institution is called Finno-Ugric Cultural Cooperation with
Russia, and despite all the problems in the world, it continues to finance many
projects in Russia and will be a host of a conference in Petrozavodsk in
September.
But not everything is rosy in this
sphere, Sergeyeva suggests. Formally, a group called the International
Consultative Committee of the Finno-Ugric Peoples has oversight on these
issues, but its leader, although from the Komi Republic, has its headquarters
in Helsinki, the capital of Finland.
That apparently is no longer
acceptable to Moscow, and Sergeyeva says that his group is being challenged by
a new Youth Association of Finno-Ugric Peoples.
That may have been Moscow’s choice at one time, but the new group may
now be beyond its control: its leaders regularly complains of Russian
discrimination against the Finno-Ugric peoples.
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