Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 7 – Non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) play a key role as an intermediary between state and
society in democratic countries. Indeed, their role is so critical that many
analysts, especially in the West, equate the level of the presence of NGOs in a
society as a measure of its democratization.
But Vladimir Putin has drawn on a
practice that Soviet officials routinely used in the last decades of the existence
of the USSR: creating and controlling government-organized NGOs – or GONGOs as
they are often known – to promote the idea that his regime is more democratic
than it is while marginalizing or even destroying legitimate NGOs in Russia.
Writing on the Znak portal,
journalist Yekaterina Vinokurova says that as a result “a class of
pseudo-social activists” has emerged in the Putin era, that this group is
interfering with the work of real NGOs, and that Russia as a result is a
country of fake ones (znak.com/2016-12-06/klass_psevdoobchestvennikov_meshaet_realnym_obchestvennikam_chto_delat).
Because of the efforts of the Putin
regime, “a significant part” of what many call Russia’s public sector is “not
real,” something that may fool some people some of the time but won’t fool
everyone all of the time because it has real and serious consequences for the
Russian Federation and its people, she writes.
These groups are only “imitations”
of reality and reflect the fact that “the Kremlin being afraid of dealing closely
with real social activists is surrounding itself with operetta personages, the
most colorful of which is” Putin’s biker friend Aleksandr ‘the Surgeon’
Zaldostanov. But there are others who are having a more noxious impact even if
they don’t get the same attention.
Last year, for instance, the presidential
administration chose not to give a grant to the Vera group which supports
hospices but instead to fund a biker club which promised to organize children’s
games; and it gave money to Anton Tsvetkov’s Officers of Russia group which “in
Black Hundreds fashion” has disrupted exhibits without the police interfering.
And the Kremlin also gave money to a
GONGO called “The Truth about Food,” whose purpose is to teach Russians to buy “cheaper
Russian goods” so that the country will be less dependent on foreign suppliers.
This notorious list, Vinokurova say, could be extended almost at will.
Of course, there are “imitations” of
public activity of “a higher order” such as the All-Russian Popular Front. But
even with these added it, “it is difficult to say what good they bring to society.”
Nonetheless, the Kremlin now is in a situation from which it will be difficult
to get out: Even these imitations may oppose the regime if it doesn’t continue
to fund them.
The Znak journalist spoke with five
analysts about this phenomenon. Abbas Galyamov, a political scientist, said
that the regime need to stop trying to block real NGOs because if it continues
to support GONGOs, no one in Russia will pay any attention to them regardless
of their propaganda value abroad.
Another political scientist, Maksim
Zharov, said that the current situation was the result of the Kremlin’s actions
in 2009-2011 when it worked hard to destroy real NGOs and then found that there
was an empty space to its left. It
decided that it had no choice but to try to create a substitute for the
organizations it had closed or gelded.
Aleksey Chesnakov, the head of the
Moscow Center for Political Conjunctures, said that unless Russia does away
with these imitation NGOs, it will be “impossible” for the country to move
forward. But he acknowledged that doing
so will be hard even though the GONGOs in fact are nothing more than “ballast”
holding back society.
Konstantin Kalachev, the head of the
Moscow Political Experts Group, said it would be harder to do that than many
imagine because regional officials would not understand an order from Moscow to
“cleanse” the political scene of the GONGOs lest they provoke even more dissent
from below or even provoke some in the GONGOs to oppose them.
And Andrey Kolyadin, a former
staffer of the Presidential Administration, said that even that understates the
problem. The only way to get rid of
GONGOs would be to conduct a political reform equivalent to that which Mikhail
Gorbachev attempted. Given what happened to him and to the USSR, Putin is
unlikely to agree to that -- at least voluntarily.
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