Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 27 – Arguing that
many ethnic Russians in non-Russian republics like Tuva and
Karachayevo-Cherkessia now feel themselves to be the victims of discrimination,
Igor Barinov, head of the Federation Agency for Nationalities Affairs, says his
institution has the responsibility to defend their rights and will do so.
Barinov’s position was echoed by
Magomedsalam Magomedov, deputy head of the Presidential Administration and
former head of Daghestan, who said that “Not a single people of Russia can feel
good if the [ethnic] Russian people feels bad,” (kommersant.ru/doc/3048403 and nazaccent.ru/content/21416-fadn-russkie-chuvstvuyut-sebya-ushemlennymi-po.html).
In the past, Russian agencies
responsible for nationality affairs have at least ostensibly declared that they
were responsible for ensuring the rights of non-Russian groups even though
Moscow policies have been anything but even-handed in dealing with them
relative to the ethnic Russian majority.
Now, however, the words of Barinov
and Magomedov at the Klyazma meeting suggest, the Kremlin is going to dispense
with that fig leaf and promote an openly pro-ethnic Russian approach, one that
may please Russian nationalists but that is likely to exacerbate relations
between Russian and non-Russian groups.
Barinov said that a poll last month
showed that nine percent of the residents of the Russian Federation as a whole
report feeling discrimination but that in some republics, including
Karachayevo-Cherkessia and Tuva, “the situation is more tense,” with 26 percent
of the residents of the latter saying they have experienced discrimination on
the basis of their ethnicity.
The agency head said that this 26
percent “corresponds with the number of Russian-speaking citizens living in
Tuva” and therefore it is entirely appropriate to conclude that “namely this group
of the population feels itself to be discriminated against on the basis of
nationality,” a view that ignores the likelihood that many ethnic Tuvans may
feel that way.
Barinov said that Russians form 80
percent of the country’s population. Many live in predominantly ethnic Russian
areas and for them Moscow’s assistance will “bear a socio-economic character.” But for those who live in non-Russian
regions, he said he will “defend Russians” by other, unspecified means. “We
have that authority,” he concluded.
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