Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 13 – In the face
of Vladimir Putin’s continuing attacks on the non-Russian republics, including
now a call by his supporters to check the Tatarstan Constitution’s legitimacy (kommersant.ru/doc/3494879) and
the failure of republic elites to fight back, some non-Russians are deciding
they have no choice but to do so on their own.
That reflects a new round of
radicalization among non-Russian groups and suggests that the coming weeks and
months may see clashes not only between them and republic elites they feel are
not representing their interests but between these nations and Moscow whose regime
they increasingly see as ever more antagonistic to their interests and needs.
The clearest indication of this
shift came at the Congress of the Bashkir People on Sunday, at which a series
of speakers suggested that “everything has become clear” about Putin and his
approach to the non-Russians and also about the inability or unwillingness of
republic leaders to combat this (idelreal.org/a/ufa-syezd-bashkirskogo-naroda/28910452.html).
Ruslan Gabbasov, the vice president
of the Bashkort National Organization, said that after Putin’s speech in Ufa
last summer, “the state languages in the republics began to be subjected to
persecution.” He also criticized ideas
circulating in Moscow about combining Tatarstan with one or more predominantly
ethnic Russian regions.
These ideas, he said, have generated enormous anger among
the Bashkirs who fear that if Moscow gets away this in the case of Tatarstan,
it will then attack Bashkortostan and all the other non-Russian republics of
the Russian Federation. He called on all Bashkir organizations to take an
active part in elections to the republic’s State Assembly scheduled for next
fall.
That
is necessary, Gabbasov said, because “in the current Kurultay sit businessmen
who are afraid for the businesses and are occupied only with the lobbying of
their own interests. The fate of the republic interests them only after all their
other concerns.” As a result, they vote however Moscow tells them to.
“It
is time,” the activist said, “to take power into our own hands.”
Ramilya
Saitova, a Bashkir activist, said that national organizations must promote the
use of Bashkir in all institutions so that all residents of the republic will feel
the need to have it studied. Simply trying to impose a requirement on those who
don’t see such a need won’t work. It may even backfire.
Edige Akhmetov, an activist from Kazakhstan, said that
his republic had done that after achieving independence in 1991; and “now our language
confidently occupies all the major portions of our life, and in the foreseeable
future, it will completely dominate the situation among Kazakhs in Kazakhstan.”
Garifulla
Yapparov, a lawyer, told the congress that one of the first thing Bashkir activists
must seek is control over the lands of the republic. Now, the republic
government controls only “a little more than one percent,” 100,000 hectares out
of 14.3 million. Moscow controls much of the rest.
And
Ayrat Dilmukhametov, a Bashkir activist who in the past has been a political
prisoner, said that Bashkirs today “must not commit in the future the mistakes
which were made during the establishment of sovereignty in the early 1990s.”
People talk about federalism, but in reality, there is no federalism in Russia
today.
Under
Putin, the defining document of the country is not the Constitution which calls
for federalism but rather the criminal code, he continued. “There is no
federalism in the country now, but this doesn’t mean that it won’t exist in the
future.”
As
long as Bashkirs exist, “we have the right to self-determination that is
recognized by all,” Dilmukhametov said, and we can promote it effectively if “we
take into consideration all the mistakes of our ‘Third Republic’ which were
committed over the last 27 years … The main thing [now] is not to allow such
mistakes” in the future.
The
congress adopted five resolutions: the first denounced the current leadership
of the republic for “ignoring all the demands of society” and caving to every
demand from Moscow, the second called on the government to seek a delimitation
of powers between Moscow and Ufa, and the third called for the formation of “a
coordinating council” of all non-Russian republics to take up the fight.
The
fourth demanded that Rustem Khamitov, the head of the republic, agree to set up
a monument to the founder of the first Bashkir autonomy Akhmet-Zaki Validi. And
the fifth called on all self-conscious Bashkirs to take an active part in upcoming
republic elections in order to take back power into their own hands.
But
a resolution the Congress did not adopt because it was not proposed is likely
to prove especially telling. The Bashkir
activists consciously chose not to take a position on Putin in the presidential
poll, fearful that if they did, they would be subjected to repression from the
republic and Moscow, activist Valiakhmet Badretdinov said.
“We
are guided in this case,” he continued, “by that saying which was widely used
by our ancestors a century ago: ‘We aren’t Reds, we aren’t Whites; we are
Bashkirs.” What happens beyond the borders of our republic doesn’t especially
concern us. But he added that after Putin’s Yoshkar-Ola speech, “everything
became clear” about the current Kremlin leader.
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