Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 28 – The Russian authorities in Moscow and “from
Kaliningrad to Salekhard” provides generous funding to neo-Cossack groups prepared
to cooperate with the state and “gives them rights which have converted them
into a special subject of the administrative code with large authority and
special social protection.”
That is the conclusion journalist Darya
Bayeva reaches on the basis of an MBK news agency investigation into the overt
and often covert programs of state support for people who want to call
themselves Cossacks whatever their real background is (mbk.media/suzhet/bolshie-appetity/).
Bayeva notes that the
way in which such Cossacks are funded by the government “is difficult to
describe as open and transparent.” Not only is such aid coming from many
different parts and levels of the government but the Cossack groups, despite
laws requiring reporting by such non-profit groups, typically fail to declare
their income.
The question of
government financing of Cossack groups attracted public attention only after members
of the Central Cossack Host were involved in the beating of demonstrators on Moscow’s
Pushkin Square on May 5. There have been reports that the group received 15.9
million rubles (300,000 US dollars) from the government since 2016.
But that almost certainly understates
the amount, the MBK journalist says. There
is evidence that the Central Cossack Host, which was set up in 2009, has
received a variety of state contracts, grants and subsidies from various government
agencies far exceeding what it has reported or what has been reported in the
media, at least by a factor of four.
The Central Cossack Host because it
is centered on Moscow appears to have received far more money than those
elsewhere, most of which are funded by regional or local governments or
sometimes even private businesses typically for guard duty or to organize
patriotic actions and parades.
The Yenisei Cossack Society, one of these regional groupings of
neo-Cossacks, has received from 100,000 to 300,000 rubles (1600 to 5,000 US
dollars) for each time it took part in patriotic parades or helped with youth
training. But others have received truly strange contracts, such as for laying
low-pressure gas pipelines.
“Another important source of financing”
for Cossack organizations are various regional state organizations involved
with patriotic training of young people, Bayeva continues. But no one knows for sure just how much
Cossack groups get from the government as a whole: Only 129 of 2762 Cossack
groups declare how much they are receiving.
But two things are very clear, she
concludes. On the one hand, pro-government Cossack groups are being given more
money from the government than are programs for handicapped or critically ill
children, a clear indication of the Putin government’s real priorities.
And on the other, many of those flocking to
Cossack groups funded by the government are doing so not because of any sense
that they are really Cossacks in any sense but rather because they see this as
an opportunity to make money and to win government protection for activities
that otherwise would be corrupt or illegal.
No comments:
Post a Comment