Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 19 – Every day
for the last two weeks, tens of thousands of Russians have been evacuated from shopping
malls, government offices and other facilities in response to anonymous
telephone calls saying that bombs have been planted in these places (takiedela.ru/news/2017/09/19/zvonki-po-uprave/
and themoscowtimes.com/news/bomb-scares-continue-across-russia-costing-authorities-more-than-5-mln-58980).
Moscow officials have been unwilling to
acknowledge that Russia is “under a terrorist attack” or even report about it,
Rosbalt blogger Anatoly Nesmiyan points out. But regional and local media are
filled with stories about this, and they highlight that Moscow clearly doesn’t
know what to do (rosbalt.ru/posts/2017/09/19/1647114.html).
“This by the way,” he continues, is “a
quite bad sign,” one that suggests that “the authorities obviously are not
capable of getting involved and influencing the situation.” They aren’t even talking about tightening the
screws or taking some other propagandistic measures to address they situation:
they are simply remaining silent, he says.
And the Russian people can see this
perhaps more clearly than ever before given that local and regional media and
numerous Internet sites are giving dry reporting about what is going on, the
kind that is especially frightening because it is understated rather than
hyperbolic and alarmist.
For Russians, it is clear that “such massive
and coordinated attacks are something that the country had not known or scene
before” and that it constitutes a test of ability of the system to warn about
and oppose. But as of today, “no real opposition to the terrorists is yet being
observed.”
And that raises even more questions about
the powers that be than it does about who may be behind this new and all too
real terrorist wave.
No comments:
Post a Comment