Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 21 – Statistics about
the size of the highway or rail networks in Russia and the other post-Soviet
states fail to capture the extent to which these links are so few in number
that the disruption of any one of them can isolate one or another part of these
countries for other parts for an extended period, something with economic and
ultimately political consequences.
Three stories about such
transportation bottlenecks surfaced this week. First, in Tyumen, flooding
destroyed a bridge on the only highway linking the oblast capital with Khanty-Mansiisk.
People in the latter joked that rain had made the latter “a real autonomous
district” (ura.ru/news/1052215707).
Second, in Kostroma, people continue
to feel cut off from the rest of Russia now that Russian rail has eliminated
direct train service there and those who want to go to another place must use a
complicated combination of trains and buses, something that is infuriating many
and costing the Russian oblast its young people (forum-msk.org/material/region/10916120.html).
And third, in Tajikistan, flooding
has destroyed the only road linking the Pamir region of Tajikistan with the
rest of the country and forced Dushanbe to turn to turn to Chinese, Iranian and
Turkish companies to try to construct an alternative road there, a task made
more urgent because of threats to the Pamirs from Afghanistan (rus.ozodi.org/content/article/27137940.html).
But roads are not
the only kind of infrastructure that may divide societies: the balance between
schools and religious facilities is another. And in two cases this past week,
there have been reports about developments in Tajikistan and the Russian
Federation which many may find disturbing as an indication of new divides.
In Tajikistan, there are now more
mosques than middle schools, something that local people say is promoting the radicalization
(centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1437370560); and in Russia,
over the last 20 years, almost as many Orthodox churches have been opened as
schools have been closed, a trend some see undermining civic values (midgard-info.ru/religion/v-rossii-chislo-pravoslavnyx-xramov-priblizilos-k-chislu-zakrytyx-shkol.html).
But what is particularly alarming,
in addition to the fact that officials in Russia and many of these other
countries are not investing in the infrastructure that their peoples need, is
that some governments, and the Russian government in particular, appear to be
exploiting their infrastructure shortcomings as means of social control.
Last week, there were complaints in
Daghestan that Russian airlines had boosted their rates during Ramadan to keep
Muslims from Daghestan from travelling to or from Moscow in order to reduce the
number of the faithful celebrating the holy month in the mosques of the Russian
capital (kavpolit.com/articles/dagestan_prazdnichnyj_vzlet-18444/).
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