Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 16 – Until
yesterday’s arrest of Aleksey Ulyukayev, the last time an incumbent minister
was arrested and charged with crimes in Moscow was in 1953 when Stalin’s
successors moved quickly to detain and ultimately execute the late dictator’s
secret police chief, Lavrenty Beria (echo.msk.ru/programs/personalno/1874756-echo/).
Beria’s demise was followed, as had
been the case with his predecessors, by efforts to transform him into a
non-person, most infamously by distributing a story about the Bering Sea that
subscribers to the publication of the Bolshaya
Sovetskaya Entsiklopedia were supposed to insert in place of article about
Stalin’s secret policeman.
That case and the many others like
it are brilliantly described in detail in David King’s 1997 book, The Commissar Vanishes: Falsification of
Photographs and Art in the Soviet Union.
But in the age of the Internet, this process of whiting out those who
fall afoul of Kremlin leaders has simultaneously become far more rapid and far
less effective than the Soviet-era one.
In a post on the Kasparov.ru portal
today, commentator Svetlana Gavrilova notes that this process of excising
people from the record is far more rapid than it used to be. Stories about them can simply be deleted from
the Internet rather than having to cut out articles from books and newspapers (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=582C13A92EA34).
She gives as an example what
happened following the detention of the vice governor of St. Petersburg, Marat
Oganesyan. Just before that happened, he
was described as scheduled to participate in an event, but within a half an
hour of his arrest, all references to him in a local online resource had
disappeared. (See tvernews.ru/news/216527/.)
Stalin infamously
that if there was no person, there was no problem. Now, in the age of the
Internet, “there was a person, and [now] there isn’t.”
But there is another aspect to the
making of non-persons in the Internet age that Gavrilova does not discuss but
that may become even more important in Putin’s Russia. Almost everything on the
Internet is reposted somewhere else or cached in one way or another. Consequently, deleting a story may make the
deleters happy for a time but perhaps not for long.
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