Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 22 – Even as some
are suggesting that Alyaksandr Lukashenka might disown the vagrants tax that
has sparked mass protests in Belarus, the Minsk dictator is making his situation
worse by threatening to build over the mass graves at Kuropaty, whose discovery
by Zyanon Paznyak in 1988 energized the Belarusian national movement at the end
of Soviet times.
More mass protests are slated for
this weekend and with officials hunkering down to avoid talking with
Belarusians (belsat.eu/ru/programs/nikolaj-chernous-volna-nedovolnyh-belorusov-budet-rasti/),
and Belarusian courts are bracing for a massive number of protests against the
application of the decree (charter97.org/ru/news/2017/2/22/241673/).
And that has sparked speculation
that Lukashenka will seek a way out, possibly blaming the decree on his
subordinates in order to save face. But
if that is his plan, he and his regime at the same time are only adding to
their problems by attacking one of the most important symbols of Belarusian
national identity, the Kuropaty mass graves.
In a commentary for Belsat,
Belarusian political commentator Aleksandr Klaskovsky says that Lukashenka has
gone to Sochi both to avoid being in his own country when his people are in the
streets and in the hopes of having a meeting with Vladimir Putin who might do
something to bail him out (belsat.eu/ru/programs/alyeksandr-klaskovskij-lukashenko-mozhet-svalit-vinu-za-dekret-o-tuneyadtsah-na-podchinennyh/).
“I don’t envy Alyaksandr Lukashenka
today,” the commentator continues. Belarusian protests are only growing and the
Kremlin appears to have turned a deaf ear to his entreaties. Undoubtedly, he is using his time in Sochi to
take a time out and even consider cancelling the vagrants tax decree by blaming
it on his subordinates.
But that is probably unlikely
because Lukashenka signed it and he needs to find a way to “save face.”
Undoubtedly, however, Klaskovsky continues, Lukashenka “himself already isn’t
happy that he at one point signed this decree.”
At the same time, however, Lukashenka
is taking a steps in another sector that almost certainly will make his situation
more difficult. He has approved the construction of a business center on the site
of the Kuropaty mass graves where more than 30,000 Belarusians were interred
after being executed on Stalin’s order (belsat.eu/ru/programs/vlasti-provodyat-negosudarstvennuyu-politiku-v-otnoshenii-kuropat/).
Belarusian activists have now
erected a tent city there in order to block the construction, and they
reportedly have the support of people in the region for both ethno-national and
NIMBY reasons. The builders say they have all the necessary approvals from the
state, but such claims are dismissed by the protesters.
The discovery of the mass graves
there in 1988 by historian Zyanon Paznyak and the partial exhumation of the
remains of those buried there contributed significantly to the rise of pro-democracy
and pro-independence attitudes among Belarusians. (For the best survey of this, see David R. Marples, “Kuropaty: The
Investigation of a Stalinist Historical Controversy,” Slavic Review,
53:2 (1994), pp. 513-523.)
In
1993, the Belarusian government took the area under its protection as a
memorial site. But now, 24 years later, Minsk has decided to allow the construction
of a business center there in order to make money. What does this say? Belsat asks. It says that
the government can’t be trusted to keep its word.
If
such views spread, they will only intensify the anti-vagrants tax movement and
transform it into a genuinely ethno-national cause, one that will be far more
anti-Moscow and anti-Russian and thus a cause that Lukashenka will have far
greater difficulties in keeping it in check by turning to his Kremlin ally as
he has in the past.
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