Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 25 – Moscow has
managed to suppress almost all coverage of the ten-day long-haul trucker strike
across Russia that ended today, but drivers in many regions in the North
Caucasus, the Urals, Siberia and the Far East took part and declared among
other things that under the Constitution, the people “are the only source of power”
in the country.
Only three reports about the strike
appeared in the last 24 hours, a measure of the government’s crackdown on coverage
rather than of the strength and size of the drivers’ action against the Plato
fee system and the government’s efforts to extract more money from them and
impose greater controls on their activities.
First, in Vladivostok, officials tried various
devices to block or at least divert the truckers and their plans for a rally,
but the truckers assembled anyway and despite official bans on signs put up ones
declaring that “we are the only source of power in Russia. We are the bearers
of sovereignty” (dv.kp.ru/daily/26774/3807662/).
Perhaps important for the future,
the United Carriers Union action against Plato was joined not only by members
of the National-Liberation Movement (NOD) but also by members of the public who
said that they viewed the truck drivers as their allies in opposing rapidly
rising domestic gas prices.
Second, in Yekaterinburg, the truckers
appealed to all drivers to stop their cars or trucks in sympathy with
them. The long-haul drivers there have
been out since December 15 to demand the repeal not only of the Plato fee
system but also of weight and other restrictions the authorities have imposed
on them recently (oblgazeta.ru/news/32454/).
And third, drivers elsewhere in
Sverdlovsk oblast declared that they were ready to continue their strike, even
though some drivers have been arrested and will be tried tomorrow (eanews.ru/news/society/V_Sverdlovskoy_oblasti_budut_sudit_dalnoboyschikov_za_stachku_protiv_Platona_25_12_2017/).
The Sverdlovsk drivers told local
journalists they were encouraged by the fact that they have been able to join
forces with the all-Russian action against rising gas prices. How much coverage
that protest will receive remains very much an open question.
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