Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 13 – As their strike
heads into its third week, Russia’s long-haul truckers have won an important
victory: Valentina Matviyenko, the Federal Council speaker, has “flinched,” in
the words of Svobodnaya pressa and
ordered two committee of her chamber to look into the Plato system, the main
Moscow policy the strikers object to.
Given that Vladimir Putin has done
everything he can to prevent coverage or discussion of the strike and that the
strikers have said from the beginning that their very first goal is to get
Russia’s senior leadership to pay attention to their grievances, Matviyenko’s
action represents a serious victory for them.
In reporting it under the title, “The
Powers have Flinched,” Svobodnaya pressa notes that yesterday the Federation
Council speaker directed that body’s committees on economic policy and on the
budget to “analyze the basis and effectiveness of the ‘Plato system’” of
collecting fees from the truckers to build roads (svpressa.ru/auto/news/170317/?ran=1).
Matviyenko’s
declaration followed one by Vyacheslav Markkhayev, a KPRF senator from
Buryatia, who argued that it was “already impossible to ignore the protests of
the long-haul drivers” and that the Plato system did not appear to be a good
way to ensure “the construction of normal quality highways.”
It
is of course true that governments often send for study those things that they
want to bury by drawing out the examination process. But it is also the case
that Matviyenko clearly feels that she has no option but to do something – and that
reality is something that the drivers and their supporters can build on.
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