Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 1 – Yevgeny Buyanin,
head of the Buryat section of Russia’s Rodina Party, has launched a petition
drive to collect 100,000 signatures that calls on Vladimir Putin to combine
Buryatia, Irkutsk Oblast and the Transbaikal Kray into a single Baikal Republic
with Russian and Buryat as its official languages.
The petition, on the change.org
portal, declares that “We, the residents [of the three federal subjects] ask
You [the president of Russia] to unite [the three] into a new subject of the
Rusian Federation – the Baikal Republic, and we ask that the state languages of
the new region be Russian and Buryat” (infpol.ru/news/society/118543-ulan-udenets-prosit-putina-sozdat-baykalskuyu-respubliku/).
Buyanin says that having been
united, “the three Baikal regions will be able to develop economically and
socially more effectively and to defend their interests at the federal level.” The move, he adds, would reduce the number of
bureaucrats and thus free up money for social needs which in Buryatia in
particular are not being met.
He said that he had come up with
this idea long ago but only now was seeking to push it forward via a
petition. He may have been encouraged by
recent discussions about shifting Buryatia from the Siberian to the Far Eastern
Federal District and about combining Buryatia and Irkutsk oblast.
It is far from clear how many
signatures Buyanin’s petition will garner or what would happen even if a
sizeable number of people sign it. That
is because it has pluses and minuses for Buryatia, for the two predominantly
Russian federal subjects and for the Russian Federation and Putin personally.
For Buryatia, the minuses and pluses
are obvious. On the minus side, such a move would eliminate the national
republic and thus leave Buryats without the focus and support they have had,
however minimal, up to now. On the plus side, it would deal with Buryat anger
about the loss of the two Buryat districts to the others and would extend the
reach of the national language.
For the Russian regions, the minuses
and pluses are also quite evident. It would cost them their individual
governments and force them at least on paper to give more support to the Buryat
language. But on the other, such a move
would create a far more powerful region, one that could use its location around
Baikal to pressure Moscow more effectively than at present.
And for the Russian Federation and
Putin personally, such a move would also have a mixed set of consequences. It
could restart Putin’s long-stalled effort at amalgamation of non-Russian areas
with Russian ones, but it could create a monster region that would be better
able to defend its interests against Moscow.
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