Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 9 – The long-haul
truckers’ strike is far larger and thus having a much bigger impact on the
economy than many suspect not only because the state-controlled media have not been
willing to cover it but also because of the specific nature of the truckers’
action and the situations they face with regard to the authorities, according
to Novaya gazeta.
The strike, the paper says, has
truly become an all-Russian action with strikers appearing from Vladivostok to
Smolensk and from Daghestan to Yamal. But because the strikers don’t have an
all-Russian coordinating center (lest it be closed by the authorities), the national
number of truckers involved is unclear (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2017/04/08/72084-protest-na-prikole).
At the local and regional strikes,
however, organizers have good figures; and so journalists from the independent
Moscow newspaper visited some of these in Kurgan, Yekaterinburg, Volgograd, St.
Petersburg, Murmansk, Irkutsk, and Daghestan in order to draw some broader
conclusions.
The paper offers three: First, the size of the action is typically
seriously underestimated because many truckers who are participating are doing
so simply by parking their trucks and not doing anything more than that. That makes them “invisible” if one is looking
only at those who come together on the roads.
Second, “with the exception of
Daghestan where there have been clashes among the long-haul truckers, protests
are occurring is a clearly peaceful fashion.” Dispersing the truckers and other
force measures are in every case at “the initiative of regional siloviki.”
And third – and this is the most
important of all – this strike is going to last a long time “because the
long-haul truckers do not have any motivation to end their work action” until
the authorities back down on the Plato system and other tariffs to which the
truckers object.
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