Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 12 – The Russian
truckers’ strike -- which has now spread to almost all regions of the Russia
and restricted deliveries of food and other goods as a result -- is beginning
to be felt by ordinary Russians who now face empty shelves and is sparking
speculation that those governors who haven’t been able to restrict the strikes
may soon be replaced.
While most major retail chains have
enough supplies on hand not to be affected yet by the truckers’ strike, smaller
independent outlets and stores in smaller cities in a number of regions have
less variety and higher prices as a result of the strike, according to the
Russian Consumer Rights Society (kommersant.ru/doc/3268616).
The Society appealed to Prime
Minister Dmitry Medvedev to take action to ensure that food and other critical
supplies are delivered in a timely fashion and that prices for such goods do
not rise to unconscionable levels. It said that it had received 116 appeals
from its members in 34 regions and that some action is needed now.
According to the society, the
situation is most dire in the republics of Daghestan where the situation is
already critical, Komi, and Buryatia, in Irkutsk, Leningrad, and Murmansk
oblasts and in 12 other federal subjects.
Medvedev’s press secretary, however, “could not comment on the
declaration of the society,” Kommersant reports.
But perhaps even more serious is a
commentary by Tatyana Alekseyeva in Svobodnaya pressa who says that “as a
result of protest actions and arrest, governors are sharply losing their
standing” with the population and Moscow and that those who handle the strike
the least well are likely to be replaced (yug.svpressa.ru/politic/article/145757/).
The federal subject head most likely
to lose his position as a direct result of the truckers’ strike is Ramazan
Abdulatipov, she suggests. His republic is currently a center of the strike and
besides making declarations, the republic head has not been able to prevent “an
escalation of tension.” He hasn’t even
been willing to meet the truckers once.
Other governors where the truck
strike is strong, Alekseyeva says, could follow Abdulatipov out the door.
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