Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 26 – Vladimir
Putin justifies the Russian tax system by suggesting that it allows the center
to redistribute money from the more prosperous regions to the poorer ones, but
in fact, Natalya Zubarevich says, that isn’t what is happening. Instead, she
says, Moscow is extracting money from the wealthier regions to pay for its own
military ambitions.
That reality, Valery Dzutsati of Radio
Liberty says, is sparking a new round of discussions about federalism and the
need for genuine fiscal federalism if Russia is to escape from its current
economic and social problems (kavkazr.com/a/mnogoobrazie-kak-preimushestvo/28937886.html).
That is all the more so, he argues,
because some like LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky have renewed their calls for
the liquidation of the entire federal system and because others are alarmed at
Putin’s attacks on non-Russian languages which many view as the most important
right they still have.
Increasingly, political commentators
are discussing the problems of federalism not so much with economic issues as
with political arrangements and suggesting that the diversity of the country is
a source of strength rather than weakness and that, as Zubarevich notes, there
is no reason to think Moscow will promote inter-regional equality.
Among those talking about these
things now is Aleksandr Kynyev of the Civic Initiatives Committee who says that
one of the most worrisome signs in Russian federalism is “the growing
de-professionalization of regional parliaments.” The only one in the North Caucasus that is
still worthy of that name is in Chechnya.
In the other non-Russian republics
of that region, he says, “deputies work primarily on an unprofessional basis, something
that lowers the quality of the laws they adopt and undermines the foundations
of federalism.”
And opposition politician Vladimir
Ryzhkov warns that “’the third reincarnation of the empire’” will only increase
the seriousness of the country’s nationality question. “The next revolution in Russia,” he says, “will
have a [pronounced] nationality component,” whatever people think now.
“Only the federal model is able of
saving us from a repetition for the third time of the scenario of the
disintegration of the empire,” Ryzhkov says.
No comments:
Post a Comment