Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 20 – Some Moscow
commentators have been expecting the extra-systemic opposition to make an issue
of Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov and his outrageous behavior – a few have even
suggested that might influence Vladimir Putin’s decision on the retention in
office of his protégé.
But a poll conducted jointly by
VTsIOM and the Analytic Center for the Moscow Region suggests that the
extra-systemic opposition is too marginal and Kadyrov too respected by too many
Russians for such a strategy to have any realistic chance of success (chechnyatoday.com/content/view/290094,
kavpolit.com/articles/nesistemnye_i_kadyrov-23641/).
According to this poll, Russia’s
extra-systemic opposition is a marginal phenomenon. Eighty-eight percent of
Russians say that they do not know what the
term refers to; and 72 percent say they have never heard of it. Only four percent can give at least one name
of a leader of this trend, and 24 percent support trying all of its leaders as “’enemies
of the people.’”
Possibly significant is that support
for repression of the extra-systemic opposition is especially high among the
well-off (34 percent), the young (29 percent) and those who use the Internet
intermittently (28 percent), the poll found. Most Russians who know anything
about the extra-systemic opposition believe it is in the pay of foreign powers,
seeks to destabilize the country, and is “unorganized and illogical.”
In this situation, some in the
extra-systemic opposition are looking for a breakout issue; and a few believe
that attacking Kadyrov is the way to go given that he is a Chechen, is so
prominent, and is so active on social networks, responding to the criticism of
others as well as dishing it out.
But the extra-systemic opposition is
almost certainly going to fail if it tries to use this tactic because Kadyrov
is widely recognized and is viewed far more positively than negatively.
Forty-nine percent of Russians in this poll consider that he brings Russia more
good than harm, with only seven percent having the opposite view.
Even if this poll is inaccurate in
some respects, its appearance now, as Putin is deciding Kadyrov’s future, is an
indication that the Kremlin leader has little to lose by keeping him on at
least as far as the elections are concerned and may even be able to exploit the
Chechen leader as an electoral resource.
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