Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 30 – Russia’s Federal
Agency for Nationality Affairs while constantly complaining that it hasn’t been
given enough money to do its work currently spends almost as much money on itself
as it does on fulfilling its tasks; and in the latter case, it often fails to
provide the regions with funds in a timely fashion, according to Viktoriya
Lopataite.
The Daily Storm journalist says that neither
the head of the agency nor its press service respond to queries about what the
organization done, forcing her and other observers to rely on audits and on the
statements of those who have worked with it (dailystorm.ru/vlast/koroli-otkata-fadn-i-taynyy-monitoring-chem-zanimaetsya-agentstvo-po-delam-nacionalnostey).
Agency head Igor Barinov has told the Duma
that his institution is insufficiently financed. In 2017, it was authorized 2.5
billion rubles (40 million US dollars). But the Accounting Chamber concluded
that he hadn’t spent all of that or passed it on the regions in time for the
money to be “effectively used.”
But however that may be, Lopataite says, the
agency knows how to take care of its bosses, spending enormous sums on VIP
travel, expensive limousines and cars, and offices in prime locations. And it
distributes money to suspicious but well-connected contractors, possibly winning
friends at the top of the power vertical as well.
Thus, the investigative journalist continues,
the agency has signed several large contracts with IMA Consulting, a group
whose leader has been identified for his ability to extract money from the
government as “the kind of government contracts” (meduza.io/feature/2017/09/20/bolshaya-zhratva-vo-vremya-vseobschey-balandy).
The nationalities agency also contracts
with the VTsIOM polling agency, a group closely linked to the Kremlin and one
whose reputation for accuracy is questioned by many. Not surprisingly, VTsIOM
has found exactly what the Federal Agency says it plans to achieve, a suspicious
coincidence, Lopataite implies.
According to the journalist, the agency
does much of its own research; but the biggest problem there is that it doesn’t
share its results. Instead, it keeps them secret, something that bothers some
scholars who hope that in time the agency will be more forthcoming but is
justified by others who say that such information could be dangerous if
released too early.
Often when the Federal Agency is mentioned
in the press, it is in the context of discussions as to whether it should be
raised to the status of a ministry.
Valery Rashkin, the first deputy chairman of the Duma’s nationalities
committee, is one of those favoring such a change: “Relations among
nationalities in Russia is a volcano” waiting to explode, he says.
Unfortunately, the government knows very
little about many aspects of this situation. Consequently, it is “extremely
unlikely” to elevate the agency to ministry status because until there is a
crisis, Moscow will continue to view the nationality question as something
other than of “first order” importance.
Indeed, Rashkin says, the government
created the agency only “with enormous reluctance. Only protests and clashes on
an ethnic basis forced them to do so.”
Maksim Shevchenko, a prominent Moscow
commentator, says that as far as he is concerned, the agency is doing its job. Three
years on, it has become “an intellectual management center for nationality policy
which distributes” money to others to carry out much of the work.
It staff, he says, “are not involved in administration
because it is far from clear how to do that in nationality policy. They fulfill
the role of financial regulator and coordinator in the realization of nationality
policy strategy very well and that is their main function.” Thus, the agency and its leadership should be
praised not condemned.
Moreover, he says, there is nothing wrong with
the agency not publishing its findings. Many of them are about things that the
government and especially its counter-terrorist operation need to know but that
the public, without adequate preparation, will not understand properly as has
been shown in the wake of the Kemerovo fire.
No comments:
Post a Comment