Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 12 – As demonstrating
has become more difficult and even dangerous in Russia, some who want to push a
political agenda are using posters instead, something that can be put up
quickly and unexpectedly and that may attract more attention from more people
than most other kinds of protest.
In “Novaya gazeta,” commentator Yan
Shenkman says that “this is a completely new
protest strategy for Moscow. That is, there were attempts earlier but now it is
becoming a trend” given that “unsanctioned and sometimes even sanctioned
pickets and meetings” can get people in trouble (novayagazeta.ru/society/72619.html).
But
it is happening not only in the Russian capital but in regional centers like
Rostov, he points out. (It is also happening in other post-Soviet countries
such as Armenia where people are putting up posters challenging Yerevan’s
pro-Moscow line. See, for example, proua.com.ua/?p=46115).
The
posters can be put up anonymously, and that is part of the intrigue. And they are
often extremely clever, avoiding any of the usual pitfalls of protest
slogans. That puts the authorities in a
difficult position, Shenkman suggests. If they try to tear down the posters,
they only attract attention to them and making themselves look ridiculous.
Shenkman
gives several examples of posters that have recently appeared on Moscow
streets. Perhaps the cleverest shows a piece of cheese in the shape of Crimea
in a mousetrap, with the simple but multiple meaning legend “Free Crimea.”
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