Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 16 – Buryatia, a
Buddhist republic of nearly one million people on the border of Mongolia,
seldom attracts much attention, although this past week, protests against
Moscow’s decision to sell off the forests there to Chinese businesses have
gained it some media time at the center (mbk.media/region/vojna-za-les-v-buryatii-pr/).
That
is unfortunate not only because the republic is important in its own right but
also because, precisely as a result of its relative obscurity, Moscow often has
used Buryatia as a testing ground for policies it then extends to other non-Russian
republics and even to predominantly ethnic Russian regions.
The
latter fact makes an interview Radzhana Dugarova, an exiled Buryat political
activist, has given to Vyacheslav Puzeyev of the After Empire portal especially important (afterempire.info/2018/05/16/radzhana/).
She says she was extremely
distressed by Moscow’s having forced Buryatia to disband its own republic
Constitutional Court several weeks ago. But the activist adds that she is
distressed not only for her homeland but also for all non-Russian republics
given that this move was “the Kremlin’s pilot project” for all other republics
as well.
“When the Kremlin decided to move
toward the destruction of autonomies, it began with Buryatia,” first a decade
ago amalgamating the two Buryat national districts with surrounding Russian
areas even though there was no threat of separatism or radicalism from either.
Moscow did this to show that it was moving from federalism to a unitary state.
But repressions have been going on
in Buryatia since the 1930s, Dugarova points out; and thus Buryats “view the
dismemberment of the republic and the liquidation of the Constitutional Court
as a continuation of this very same process.”
Unfortunately, in Buryatia now, there are few officials ready to defend
their republic against Moscow.
At the end of Soviet times, Buryats
were able to organize the own national movement, their own national political
party and their own Congress of the Buryat People. But since Putin came to office,
all these things have either been banned or captured by pro-Moscow people who
block the Buryats from advancing their own interests.
Dugarova notes that one of the few
times many outside the republic have talked about Buryatia was when Russian
propagandists played up the idea that Buryats were fighting alongside
pro-Moscow forces in Ukraine. At that
time, she organized a webpage to unmask this “fake news.”
As far as the future is concerned, Dugarova
says that after the Russian empire disintegrates, Buryatia “really will be better
off in some sort of free confederation” because it is small and closely intertwined
with its neighbors both within and beyond the borders of the current Russian
Federation.
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