Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 26 – A new
proposed law in the Russian Duma on “defending” works of art from vandalism is
designed to ensure that the Kremlin and no one else, including most prominently
the Moscow Patriarchate and its allies, gets to decide what is attacked and
when, according to Boris Vishnevsky.
In “Novaya gazeta,” the Moscow
commentator says that the measure, which would impose heavy fines against those
who engage in vandalism, provides a kind of cover for a Russian government move
with far broader goals (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2016/12/24/71019-antivandalnoe-pokrytie).
Clearly there is a problem with
attacks on artists and their works in Russia, the commentator says, especially
those by Orthodox activists or Cossacks who are seldom if ever brought to
justice for their actions, a situation which leads many to conclude that they
are acting on behalf of the state which may even be encouraging such things.
But the real reason for this action now,
Vishnevsky argues, is that Vladimir Putin wants again to be the only one making
decisions about who and what can be attacked in Russia, lest attacks by others
get out of hand and against the interests of the Russian state or even against the
state itself.
That is clear from the explanations
the authors have provided – they point out that such attacks violate the
Russian constitution – but it is even clearer from the timing of their
introduction of this bill.
On December 2, Putin told the
Presidential Council on Culture and the Presidential Council on the Russian
Language that attacks on exhibits, shows, and works of art are “absolutely
impermissible and must be punished with all the severity of the law.” And now the Duma has come up with proposed
legislation.
In short, “the president says ‘it’s
needed,’ and the Duma responds, ‘yes!’”
And translated from “the presidential to the Russian language,” this
means that “only the state has the monopoly on banning spectacles and exhibits:
it will prohibit what needs to be prohibited.” No one else in Russia should
have that power.
“Will this project help?” Vishnevsky
asks. “Possibly but only a little.” Fines alone are unlikely to frighten “the
pogromshchiki” now on the loose in Russia. And thus it is no surprise that the
authors of the new bill are promising to revise the criminal code and introduce
more severe penalties as well.
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