Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 27 – Vladimir Putin
ensured his rise to power by orchestrating the blowing up of apartment
buildings in Moscow and restarting Russia’s war against Chechnya. But he may have set in train his fall from
power by supporting Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin’s plan to demolish the aging
five-storey apartment buildings known as “khrushchoby.”
That is because the second action eerily
echoes the first in two ways. On the one hand, it represents an attack on the
rights of Russians by their own government that only the most horrific but
self-confident dictators would take and thus offends more than just those who
are immediately affected, as some are pointing out (echo.msk.ru/blog/varlamov_i/1970254-echo/).
And on the other, both the bombings
in 1999 and the demolition of apartment blocks now highlight the extent to which
the Kremlin and its allies will do everything they can to defend themselves and
their allies in the Russian “elite” even as they show no respect at all for ordinary
Russians, their rights, and even their lives.
One of the most horrifying aspects
of the 1999 explosions and perhaps the clearest evidence of Putin’s culpability
was that a survey of local newspapers in Moscow at that time found no
obituaries for those who had died in the bombings, something that suggests the
buildings were targeted because those who killed were not politically
significant to Putin.
Now, the RBC news agency reports
that the Moscow city authorities say they won’t be tearing down khrushchoby in
three city districts populated by the elites and their extended families, a
limitation implying a similar calculation by the authoriteis to the one they
made in 1999 (rbc.ru/society/20/04/2017/58f88cfb9a79477b1b148d51
and echo.msk.ru/news/1970824-echo.html).
After blowing up the apartments in
1999, Putin moved quickly to blame the Chechens and to restart the war, actions
that precluded much discussion about what he had done, all of the evidence including
the failed effort in Ryazan captured on television footage pointing to him
notwithstanding.
But now, after 17 years in power,
Putin can’t blame the khrushchoby destruction on outside forces, his preferred
tactic to deflect attention from what he is doing. Instead, according to Moscow commentators, he
is supporting an action which offends not just the immediate victims but also
all Russians.
That is because he is striking at
the right of Russians to own their own homes, a right that Russians
increasingly value as one of the most positive achievements from the demolition
of the USSR and thus offending far more than the tens of thousands of
Muscovites and likely others who will be “deported” from their homes now (echo.msk.ru/blog/varlamov_i/1970254-echo/).
Indeed, as Moscow political analyst
Yekaterina Schulmann puts it, “property for our contemporary is a sacred thing,
a super value which it is better not to touch” and that an attack on it like the
one Putin has launched could lead to “democracy via demolition” (echo.msk.ru/blog/schulmann_video/1970522-echo/).
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