Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 30 – Twenty-five
years ago today, the Supreme Soviet of the Tatar Soviet Socialist Republic – it
had already dispensed with the hated word “autonomous” – voted unanimously with
only one abstention for a Declaration of State Sovereignty of Tatarstan, a
declaration that it has never disavowed, Rashit Akhmetov says.
And thus despite all the moves
against the republic taken by Boris Yeltsin and even more by Vladimir Putin,
that declaration, the editor of Zvezda
Povolzhya argues, continues to provide the basis of hope for the future (“25
let,” Zvezda Povolzhya, no. 31 (759),
August 27-September 2, 2015, p. 1).
What is perhaps more intriguing,
even some who oppose the Tatarstan project are saying on this anniversary that
what Tatarstan did a generation ago and what is leaders and people continue to
do may become the basis for the transformation not just of that Middle Volga
republic but of the Russian Federation as a whole.
In his lead article, Akhmetov says
that the adoption of the Declaration of State Sovereignty was “a turning point
in the history of the republic” because it asserted both Tatarstan’s ownership
of its natural resources and the supremacy of Tatarstan laws over Moscow’s.
He acknowledges that Tatarstan was
able to do this because it successfully exploited the tensions between Boris
Yeltsin who wanted to take the RSFSR out from under Soviet control and Mikhail
Gorbachev who wanted to weaken Yeltsin by promoting the so-called “parade of
sovereignties” within the Russian republic.
Twenty-five years later, many even
in Tatarstan treat this event as of only historical interest. After all, they
say, Russia’s Constitutional Court has declared it null and void, and Moscow
especially under Putin has gutted most of its key provisions. But that is a mistake, Akhmetov says, because
the Declaration laid the groundwork for Tatarstan’s special status.
Not only did the Russian
Constitutional Court not exist when Tatarstan adopted the declaration,
something that makes its ruling problematic, the Kazan editor says; but “Tatarstan did not sign the Federative
Treaty with Russia,” as did all other republics except Chechnya, but only an
agreement on the delimitation of powers and responsibilities.
Moreover, in 1992, the people of
Tatarstan in a referendum “confirmed the status of the declaration,” and most
important, “the Parliament of Tatarstan up do now has no disavowed the
Declaration of Sovereignty,” even though it has removed the word from the
republic’s constitution under pressure from Moscow.
As long as Yeltsin was Russian
president, the leaders of Tatarstan as a result of their pragmatic approach
were able to maintain most of the provisions of the 1990 Declaration. But then
Putin came to power and “Tatarstan sovereignty ended,” with the republic
reduced from what had been virtually “confederal” relations with Moscow to
those of “an autonomy.”
The Kremlin leader continues to chip
away at what the Tatars have done, most recently by launching a campaign
suggesting that the Tatarstan leadership is fundamentally corrupt, a charge
Moscow can make only by distorting the facts, claiming for instance that the
number of slot machines in Tatarstan is greater than the total number in the
Russian Federation.
According to Akhmetov, Tatars can
see through this and recognize that what is going on is the setting of the
stage for a raider attack on Tatneft by Putin’s Rosneft like the one Moscow
carried out in Bashkortostan. And they
can give “an effective rebuff” to this by voting overwhelmingly for the current
president of Tatarstan, Rustam Minnikhanov.
That the Tatar editor should
consider the 1990 Declaration important is no surprise, but what is striking is
that some who can hardly be called friends of that Middle Volga republic see
Tatarstan’s continuing ability to take a position at odds with the center as a
possible trigger of a new round of “perestroika’
in the Russian Federation.
In a commentary on Forum-MSK.org,
left-wing commentator Sergey Gupalo suggests it would be a mistake to ignore
what stands behind Tatar celebrations of this anniversary because despite
everything Putin has done, Tatarstan alone retains the office of president,
something even Chechnya hasn’t been able to do (forum-msk.org/material/region/10969431.html).
Tatarstan’s ability to maintain
itself in this way reflects Kazan’s development of economic and political ties
to foreign countries; and those ties, the communist commentator says, help to
explain why one feels “more than anywhere else the breathe of an approaching
new perestroika,” one that may be liberal or otherwise depending on events.
Among the intelligentsia in
Tatarstan, he says, one feels the same spirit that one felt at the end of
Soviet times, the view that “’one can’t continue to live this way anymore.’” Gupalo writes that he experienced that in the
years before 1991 in Ukraine; now, he feels the same thing in Tatarstan.
And he says that on the basis of
those experiences, he “sees direct parallels between the crisis of the late
USSR and the crisis of present-day Russian Federation,” even though no specific
actions have yet been taken in Tatarstan. But the shift in attitudes there like
the shift in attitudes in Ukraine 25 years ago suggests that they will be forthcoming.
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